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New Evidence for World-Wide Flood?
http://sites.silaspartners.com/partner/Article_Display_Page/0,,PTID4859|CHID5|CIID147858,00.html
New Evidence for World-Wide Flood? UPI: Int'l News - WASHINGTON - Archeologists are rejoicing over a discovery this week of a man-made structure 300 feet below the surface of the Black Sea, which points to dramatic new evidence of an apocalyptic flood that may have inspired the Biblical story of Noah. The Washington Post reported this week a collapsed barn-like structure was discovered more than 300 feet below the surface of the Black Sea, along with planks, beams and tree branches untouched by worms or mollusks. The Black Sea's 7,000-foot abyss may shelter intact shipwrecks dating back to the dawn of seafaring, the report said. "It is beyond our wildest imagination," explorer Robert D. Ballard, leader of the expedition, said when contacted by phone on the expedition. "Wood is existing much shallower than we thought. When we do go deep, it can only get better." The Black Sea project's goal is to look for ancient shipwrecks and perhaps evidence of a great flood. Late last year, the outline of an ancient coast 550 feet below the current waterline was discovered. That coast was the first visual evidence that a flood had occurred in the region eons ago. Twelve miles east of the Turkish port city of Synope, the expedition used a special "side-scan" sonar to map anomalies on the sea floor. A robotic submersible was then sent to investigate the most promising site, which led to the discovery this week. A collapsed building that would be described as a "good-sized barn" was found, which was 39 feet long and 13 feet wide, Ballard said. University of Pennsylvania archaeologist Fredrik Hiebert described the construction technique of the barn as a "cluster of wood stuck in a clay matrix"--traditional Black Sea "wattle and daub" architecture. "This struck a bell, because it was familiar to me from land," Hiebert said. "Literally my jaw dropped." Other evidence of human habitation, including a trash heap with polished stones and old tree branches and pieces of wood, were found, Ballard said. "Among scholars who take the Bible literally this will be confirmation," said Hershel Shanks, editor of Biblical Archaeology Review. "Critical Bible scholars are almost unanimous in regarding the flood story as a legend. On the other hand, legends arise not out of imagination but from an experience." Also found in the same general area were two old shipwrecks containing many intact wooden plants and ceramic jars used in ancient times to transport liquids such as olive oil or wine. Researchers are unsure if they are from the same period or related to an ancient flooded settlement. Because the waters of the Black Sea lack oxygen below a depth of 500 feet, archaeologists have long been interested in the sea. Theoretically, organic material that shipworms would quickly eat would lie untouched in the Black Sea's sterile depths. Last year, interest in the Black Sea was stimulated with the publication of "Noah's Flood," by Columbia University geologists William Ryan and Walter Pitman. They suggested the modern-day sea was formed 7,500 years ago when melting glaciers raised sea level until the waters of the Mediterranean breached the natural dam at the Bosporus. A cataclysmic deluge followed, their theory said. Seawater from the Mediterranean poured into the Black Sea basin at 200 times the volume of Niagara Falls. The heavier salt water plunged to the bottom of the existing fresh water lake and began to fill the basin like a bathtub. Then, the theory proposes, land was submerged for thousands of square miles, destroying communities, killing people and wiping out plants and animals as the ecosystem flipped from fresh water to salt water in only two years. The flood also created a two-layered body of water, which permanently interfered with the normal convection that brings deep water to the surface for oxygenation. Fresh water, which is less dense, lay like a lid on top of the denser Mediterranean water, which was sterile once its original oxygen had been used up. The Black Sea today is dead as the ancient day when the floodwaters settled, except for the top 500 feet, which supports a thriving marine life. "I don't think we'll ever know what flood that was," Shanks said of researcher's questions over the flood's date. Tests of shell samples showed that freshwater mollusks had lived in the waters until 7,500 years ago, but had been replaced with marine species 600 years later. And he said, researchers are questioning: "Did anyone live here?" After scanning the underwater coastal area earlier this month, Ballard's team located the countryside area and river systems under water. Soon after they found the submerged barn-like building, with wood still intact, about 200 feet above where they expected to find it. "Now we're looking for the neighbors," Ballard said. |
Interesting article.
Thanks! -Z. |
I think the local "Black Sea" flood has been pretty well dismissed as a possible explanation of the "Noah's Flood". Interesting article, however. I would like to learn more about this.
Plus, finding a structure at the bottom of the Black Sea doesn't do anything to support a global flood (for which there is no evidence) so the title of the article is a little misleading. Mike |
Since a global flood is physically impossible (enough water does not exist on the planet to raise the sea level 5 feet, let alone more), this raises questions about ways land masses could have dropped in the past.
Personally, I thought the highlight of the article was this quote: "When we do go deep, it can only get better." :-) |
I think they're just pretending to be interested in history. It's the wine they're after.
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Kinda like those guys a few years ago who brought up some WWII (or was it WWI) era champaign?
Imagine what a 7,500 year old vintage would run? (Even though it would probably taste like crap.) |
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