Rishi: Traditionally Atharvanic/Angirasa attribution for kṛtyā-hymns (as per anukramaṇī-type tradition). | Devata: Bhava-Śarva (Rudra) and the deva-missile (devahéti) as personified punitive force. | 32 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvan (traditional attribution for this physiologico-cosmological section) | Devata: Pavamāna (purifying power; Soma-like), and the embodied Purusha as ritual subject | 33 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (amulet hymn complex; r̥ṣi attribution varies in indices). | Devata: Maṇi (amulet) empowered by Varana; functional ‘deity’ is the charm-power itself. | 25 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (anti-venom corpus; specific r̥ṣi attribution varies by anukramaṇī). | Devata: Indra; the Gods collectively; Varuṇa (protective triad against serpent-force). | 26 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (exact r̥ṣi attribution varies by anukramaṇī; commonly treated as an Atharvanic prosperity formula-set) | Devata: Dakṣiṇā (personified), with Sūrya as cosmological guarantor | 50 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (maṇi-hymn stratum; specific r̥ṣi varies by anukramaṇī). | Devata: Maṇi (amulet as personified protective power); implicit ojas. | 35 Mantras
Rishi: Traditionally attributed in Anukramaṇī-style listings to Atharvanic seers (Skambha hymn complex; often treated as anonymous/rahasya in character). | Devata: Skambha (cosmic Support; brahman). | 44 Mantras
Rishi: Traditionally attributed within AV 10.8 to a brahmodya-style seer (often treated as anonymous/collective Atharvanic speculation rather than a single named ṛṣi). | Devata: Prajāpati (cosmic creator; also the hidden principle within the garbha). | 44 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (exact r̥ṣi attribution varies by anukramaṇī for AV 10.9) | Devata: Go/Payas (the Cow and her milk as personified abundance); implicitly Paṣupati/Viśve Devāḥ in prosperity frame | 27 Mantras
Rishi: Atharvanic tradition (sūkta attributed within AV ritual corpus; specific ṛṣi assignment requires pada-anukramaṇī consultation). | Devata: Yajña (Sacrifice personified) / Vaśā as ritually empowered object | 34 Mantras