Results 181 to 190 of about 2,788 (229)
Notes from the Field: Assessment of Awareness, Use, and Access Barriers to Cooling Centers in Maricopa County, Arizona - August 1-September 15, 2023. [PDF]
Gettel A +11 more
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Modeling and design of solar + storage-powered community resilience hubs across California. [PDF]
Murphy PM +6 more
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"The children of the Sun and Moon are the gardens"-How people, plants, and a living Sun shape life on Tanna, Vanuatu. [PDF]
Balick MJ +7 more
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Perceptions of US-Based Muslim Patients of Their Dermatology Care.
El-Banna G +5 more
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The Sun, Sun Myths, and Sun Worship
Most of us take the sun for granted. We know it to be a heavenly body subject to the same laws of physics that govern events on earth. For example, we know that the earth’s axis is not vertical to the earth’s orbit around the sun; that the resultant oblique angles at which the sun’s rays strike the earth cause seasonal variation in radiation (as Figure
Arthur C Giese, Giese Arthur C
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The Sun Worship and Snake Worship in Dotaku [PDF]
Dotaku are a representative relic of the Yayoi period in Japan. The designs and patterns of Dotaku are the reproduction of the life scene of the Yayoi people and the manifestation of their praying for a good harvest of rice. Dotaku are sacrificial utensils.
CHENG, Haiyun
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The Saurasaṃhitā: The Earliest Surviving Tantra on Sun-Worship
The Saurasaṃhitā is the earliest surviving Tantra text on Sun worship available by far, and is preserved in a palm-leaf manuscript preserved in National Archives, Kathmandu, dated Nepal Samvat 69 (equivalent to 949 CE). The Saurasaṃhitā is a little-known but important text that identifies the Sun god with Śiva.
Acharya, Diwakar
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The Classical Age of Sun Worship in Ancient India
Asian Man (the) - an International Journal, 2013This paper delineates the classical facts on Sun worship in ancient India. It explores the evidences found from the Neolithic period to the Vedic era in Indian civilisation. It was found that the worship was known as “graffiti” in the Neolithic period. Swastika in Harappan culture and several terms and mantras were used for this act in the Vedic period.
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