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  2. Moche culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moche_culture

    The Salinar culture reigned on the north coast of Peru from 200 BC–200 AD. According to some scholars, this was a short transition period between the Cupisnique and the Moche cultures. [5] There are considerable parallels between Moche and Cupisnique iconography and ceramic designs, including the iconography of the "Spider god".

  3. Cupisnique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupisnique

    The spider deity image combines a spider's neck and head, with the mouth of a large feline, and the beak of a bird. According to the team leader Walter Alva, "Cupisnique and Chavin shared the same gods and the same architectural and artistic forms, showing intense religious interaction among the cultures of the Early Formative Period from the ...

  4. Urarina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urarina

    Afterwards that man acquired a wife, a different woman, one who had at first summoned successively a pit viper, a spider, and a giant biting ant in an unsuccessful attempt to evade him. [20] In another Urarina deluge-myth, a deluge was produced, on the occasion of a cassava -beer festival, by the urination by the daughter of the ayahuasca -god ...

  5. Cultural depictions of spiders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_depictions_of_spiders

    Huntsman spiders are large and swift, often eliciting arachnophobic reactions from susceptible people, and are the subject of many superstitions, exaggerations and myths. The banana spider myth claims that the Huntsman spider lays its eggs in banana flower blossoms, resulting in spiders inside the tip of bananas, waiting to terrorize an ...

  6. Why wolf spiders are one of Halloween's most misunderstood ...

    www.aol.com/why-wolf-spiders-one-halloweens...

    “The Spider Woman or Grandmother Spider legends are part of the creation mythology for many Native American cultures. In West African folklore, Anansi is a spider known for his cunning and trickery.

  7. Category:Mythological spiders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mythological_spiders

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  8. Do sleeping humans really swallow 8 spiders a year? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-09-23-do-sleeping-humans...

    A spider could do this only a few ways, like using its silk to float and land in a sleeping person's mouth. But Maggie Hardy, biochemist at the University of Queensland, said, "You'd have to be ...

  9. Human uses of arthropods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_uses_of_arthropods

    The arthropods are a phylum of animals with jointed legs; they include the insects, arachnids such as spiders, myriapods, and crustaceans. [1] Insects play many roles in culture including their direct use as food, [2] in medicine, [3] for dyestuffs, [4] and in science, where the common fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster serves as a model organism for work in genetics and developmental biology.