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  1. Mesopotamian cosmic geography.Wayne Horowitz - 1998 - Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns.
    Machine generated contents note: Part I: Sources for Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography -- 1. The Levels of the Universe: KAR 307 30-38 and AO 8196 iv 20-223 -- 2. "The Babylonian Map of the World"20 -- 3. The Flights of Etana and the Eagle into the Heavens43 -- 4. The Sargon Geography67 -- 5. Gilgamesh and the Distant Reaches of the Earth's Surface 96 -- 6. Cosmic Geography in Accounts of Creation 107 -- 7. The Geography of the Sky: The "Astrolabes', (...)
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  • On a Special Use of the Sign "Zero" in Cuneiform Astronomical Texts.O. Neugebauer - 1941 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 61 (4):213-215.
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  • The Babylonian Zodiac: Speculations on its invention and significance.Lis Brack-Bernsen & Hermann Hunger - 1999 - Centaurus 41 (4):280-292.
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  • The Ethiopic Book of Enoch. A New Edition in the Light of the Aramaic Dead Sea Fragments.James C. VanderKam & Michael A. Knibb - 1981 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 101 (3):412.
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  • Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography.F. S. Reynolds & Wayne Horowitz - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (1):131.
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  • Ethiopic Astronomy and Computus.Franz Amadeus Dombrowski & Otto Neugebauer - 1983 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 103 (2):480.
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  • Studies in Babylonian lunar theory: part III. The introduction of the uniform zodiac.John P. Britton - 2010 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 64 (6):617-663.
    This paper is the third of a multi-part examination of the Babylonian mathematical lunar theories known as Systems A and B. Part I (Britton, AHES 61:83–145, 2007) addressed the development of the empirical elements needed to separate the effects of lunar and solar anomaly on the intervals between syzygies, accomplished in the construction of the System A lunar theory early in the fourth century B.C. Part II (Britton, AHES 63:357–431, 2009) examines the accomplishment of this separation by the construction of (...)
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  • A 3405: An Unusual Astronomical Text from Uruk.John M. Steele - 2000 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 55 (2):103-135.
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  • The First Jewish Astronomers: Lunar Theory and Reconstruction of a Dead Sea Scroll.Eshbal Ratzon - 2017 - Science in Context 30 (2):113-139.
    ArgumentThe Astronomical Book of Enoch describes the passage of the moon through the gates of heaven, which stand at the edges of the earth. In doing so, the book describes the position of the rising and setting of the moon on the horizon. Otto Neugebauer, the historian of ancient science, suggested using the detailed tables found in later Ethiopic texts in order to reconstruct the path of the moon through the gates. This paper offers a new examination of earlier versions (...)
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