Explore Myths about Sun
![](/images/icons/sun_re.jpg)
Re was known as the sun-god and the creator in ancient Egypt. He took on many forms, each depending ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_lugh.gif)
Lugh, whose name means "the shining one," was the Celtic Sun god. The underworld god Balor ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_aztecton.jpg)
Most of the astronomical beliefs of the Aztecs of central Mexico are known from the existing ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_aztechuit.gif)
Huitzilopochtli was the patron deity in Aztec mythology. The Aztecs were an ancient civilization ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_apollo.jpg)
In Greek mythology, Apollo was the son of Zeus (Jupiter) and Leto (Letona). He was the twin ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_liza.gif)
Liza is a deity of the Fon people who live in West Africa. Liza is associated with the Sun, ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_chinese.jpg)
Antique inscriptional documents tell us how during the time of the Chou dynasty (c. 1027-221 ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_maui.jpg)
Maui was the trickster hero of Polynesian mythology. It is said that Maui was born prematurely ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_japanese.gif)
Amaterasu was the Sun goddess according to the oldest Japanese religion called Shinto. Shinto ...
Read more
![](/images/icons/sun_shamash.jpg)
Shamash was a Sun god according to the Sumerian mythology. Sumerians were living more than ...
Read more
More about Myths about Sun
Did you know?
Did you know that
Zephyr was the Greek god of the west wind?
Do you know what the Greek goddess, Persephone, has to do with the seasons and the underworld?
Earth and Space Science Concept of the Day
Do you know what this word or phrase means?
AdiabaticxAdiabatic : An adiabatic process happens without any heat transfer with the environment.
Click on the word to find out!
Research Highlights
Current observational tools cannot account for roughly half of the heat that is believed to have built up on Earth in recent years, according to a "Perspectives" article in this week's issue of the journal...
Read more![](/olpa/images/missing_heat1_h.jpg)