Yeah_Right
Muse
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2002
- Messages
- 638
Where did that much water come from?
And where did all that water go?
Where did that much water come from?
It would explain how all the animals were saved, and it would explain why there are flood myths around the world. Search for "Noah's Ark, Discover the Science of Man's Oldest Mystery" on Amazon.
Well, you have to admit: This ground-breaking hypothesis would at least explain why the ark was found multiple times already.
On a related note, I have always wondered why God had to flood the world anyway. Couldn't he just exterminate the offending organisms with the touch of a button or something ?
The Asian, Australian, and American arcs have possible links to ancient blond populations.
Kosher food has sometimes been accurately described as what is left after the goyim take the good bits.Actually, it was only the unfit to eat that went in pairs. There were more than one pair of all the Kosher animals. Of course, how many of those Kosher animals got off the ark isn't told.
Ya learn something new every day. Thanks.[pedant]I'd rather see him hock them than hawk them[/pedant]
Graham Hancock is an entertaining writer. His books are fun to read and imagine what life might be like if it where true. Hancock is more a science fiction writer than he is a scientific writer.Check out Graham Hancock's "Underworld" to learn about civilizations flooded by Ice Age melting.
Graham Hancock is an entertaining writer. His books are fun to read and imagine what life might be like if it where true. Hancock is more asciencefiction writer than he is a scientific writer.
Fixed.
Anyway, mister Moen, if you think the name of someone trying to keep alive the Atlantis myth - remember, Atlantis was first simply mentioned in a tale, and all evidence points to it simply being just that, a tale with a moral to it. Just like Aesop's fable contained talking animals to bring home the point of his morals better. - then I'm afraid I still won't take your claims seriously. He simply doesn't have any scientific credibility, and he certainly hasn't brought any indisputable evidence for his many silly claims.
But hey, here are a couple of links to help you understand just why the entire flood couldn't possibly have happened if it had to stay consistent with the laws of physics. In particular, I suggest the parts about how the rain would crush anything, how the vapour would have steamed everything to death, how such a large boat (or even several smaller boats) with so many animals would need a lot of caretakes, etc. etc:
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/list.html#CH400-CH599
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-noahs-ark.html
In short, the whole Noah story goes entirely against pretty much every scientific branch there is. Geology, biology, physics, and also against common sense, for that matter.
All true, but interestingly (and irrelevant to your point, I know), I have read elsewhere that whoever wrote the story knew a little bit about boat building, and gave us a neat insight into early uses of natural polymerization.
And where did all that water go?
Genesis 2:5 tells us that there was no rain before man was created. Some have suggested that there was no rainfall anywhere on the earth until the time of the flood. However, the Bible does not actually say this, so we should not be dogmatic.
If 'god' had his hand in this my didn't he just conceive the females magically, then only 1 of each animal be needed, or he could just create them again? The story makes no sense no matter which way you look at it.