Kraichgauer wrote:
There is a theory that the Biblical flood may have been the flooding of the Red Sea at the end of the Ice Age, with the melting of a glacier to the north.
-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
Thanks for reminding me. The Old Testament does coincide with a certain event, but alot more recent than the dinosaur meteor.
There is a new intriguing theory that involves, not the Red Sea, but the Persian Gulf.
Oil tankers now sail over what might well have been the actual location of the Garden of Eden!
The shallow upper part of the Persian Gulf (above the straight of Hormuz) was dry land that only became inundated since the melting of the last Ice Age-prehistoric- but only a few thousand years ago.
The Noah myth ( and its Mesopotamian percurser stories) may well be the distorted memory of that flooding.
Also- the Garden of Eden is described as being located where four rivers meet (two being named in the Bible as the familiar Tigris and Euphrates- the other two were of unknown identity).
When the upper Persian gulf was dry land the Tigris and Euphrates (which enter the gulf from Iraq today) would each have been a couple hundred miles longer than now and flowed through this land to reach the ocean. And there is evidence of a now extinct river flowing into that land from the north from what is now Iran,and another from the south from what is now Saudi Arabia. These two now dry rivers would have met the Tigris and Euphrates in the now inundated land.- four major rivers meeting. So apparently there really was a place where the TIgris and Euphrates met two other rivers. And that place did get (permanently) drowned in the post Ice Age melt during the Neolithic.
Eden? Noah? Coincidences? Maybe. Maybe not.