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#21
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
"thunder" wrote in message ... On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 01:01:01 -0800, chuckgould.chuck wrote: On topic slant: If the stories about Noah, Gilgamesh, etc etc etc etc are either true or remotely close to true, then it looks like a whole lot of mankind is directly descended from.........Boaters! :-) I'm sure you have heard there is some speculation that the Black Sea Deluge was "the flood". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_deluge_theory http://www.christiananswers.net/q-crs/crs-blacksea.html Could be, but was most likely a tsunami. There are stories in South American ancient history about a flood. And If there was a large meteorite hitting the sea, the water could flow over every thing as well as a wobble of the earths spin from a large impact, causing the seas to flow over the land. Is one of the suppositions for the reasons we find Woolly Mammoths flash frozen. Food in the stomach not digested. As well as the coal fields of Kentucky / VA are all pretty much at the same elevation and took large piles of organic material to make the coal seams. |
#22
posted to rec.boats
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 10:38:26 -0800, "Dene" wrote:
"JohnH" wrote in message .. . On 12 Jan 2006 01:01:01 -0800, wrote: Calif Bill wrote: "JohnH" wrote in message ... On 10 Jan 2006 21:25:43 -0800, wrote: JimH wrote: .........rained in Seattle for 24 straight days! Have you finished building the Ark yet? Naw. I think I got the instructions confused. I got lost when I tried to "go fer" wood, and while my inclination would be to saw it into planks for some reason ark building requires that one "cube" it. It has been raining, sometimes hard, for at least some portion of the last 24 days. The record is something like 33 days. My ark will be diesel powered, of course, and fully provisioned for an offshore voyage of 40 days and 40 nights. I think a watermaker will be essential. Here's my question (asked of several who have come to my door asking if I believed the Bible): Once you've built your ark, and loaded two of all the animals on earth thereon, and spent about two weeks at sea, who cleaned up all the crap in the bottom of your ark? Peggy Hall may have an interest in this also! -- John H. "Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it." Rene Descartes There was a study, or paper one time about just this. They said, since the animals would not be able to move much, the metabolism would slow down and both reduce intake and output. IMHO, is why they abandoned the ark high on a mountain where it is hard to get to. Probably still stinks bad. Noah pretty well had his fill of that floating zoo. Doesn't the Bible say that just about the first thing he did after they escaped the ark was plant a vineyard? Priorities, you know. :-) On topic slant: If the stories about Noah, Gilgamesh, etc etc etc etc are either true or remotely close to true, then it looks like a whole lot of mankind is directly descended from.........Boaters! :-) More rain today, more forecast for tomorrow. Moving rapidly into second place for the number of consecutive rainy days in this region since modern record keeping began. If Noah had his wits about him, he probably ran the ark with a steam engine. Lots of water available, and with just a bit of drying out he would have had plenty of animal "chips" to use for fuel. I think the Redskins are turning the sprinklers on for their practices. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Wouldn't surprise me if D.C. gets more annual rain than Seattle. Know for certain that NYC does....by about 10 inches. Go Seahawks!! -Greg So does DC, but ours tend to come in the way of fast hard rainfalls, not the continuous drizzle of Seattle. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#23
posted to rec.boats
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
"JohnH" wrote in message ... Wouldn't surprise me if D.C. gets more annual rain than Seattle. Know for certain that NYC does....by about 10 inches. Go Seahawks!! -Greg So does DC, but ours tend to come in the way of fast hard rainfalls, not the continuous drizzle of Seattle. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Funny how come the Seattle chamber of commerce fails to mention that distinction. So....you a Redskin fan? -Greg |
#24
posted to rec.boats
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 14:32:50 -0800, "Dene" wrote:
"JohnH" wrote in message .. . Wouldn't surprise me if D.C. gets more annual rain than Seattle. Know for certain that NYC does....by about 10 inches. Go Seahawks!! -Greg So does DC, but ours tend to come in the way of fast hard rainfalls, not the continuous drizzle of Seattle. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." Funny how come the Seattle chamber of commerce fails to mention that distinction. So....you a Redskin fan? -Greg Yes, this year! -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#25
posted to rec.boats
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: .........rained in Seattle for 24 straight days! Have you finished building the Ark yet? Naw. I think I got the instructions confused. I got lost when I tried to "go fer" wood, and while my inclination would be to saw it into planks for some reason ark building requires that one "cube" it. It has been raining, sometimes hard, for at least some portion of the last 24 days. The record is something like 33 days. My ark will be diesel powered, of course, and fully provisioned for an offshore voyage of 40 days and 40 nights. I think a watermaker will be essential. I just heard it has now been 26 straight days. |
#26
posted to rec.boats
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Hey Chuck, I heard it has......................
thunder wrote: snip I'm sure you have heard there is some speculation that the Black Sea Deluge was "the flood". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_deluge_theory http://www.christiananswers.net/q-crs/crs-blacksea.html Thunder: While the article in wikipedia is fairly reliable, the christian answers url is less so. In its Summary, there are a couple of mis-uses of terms: "Summary: Geological evidence obtained through rock cores ... " They weren't rock cores, they were sea-bottom mud cores. " ... indicates the presence of freshwater flora and fauna beneath the Black Sea, suggesting that this area was once a smaller freshwater lake." Actually, that was a brackish-water (half-salty) fauna, and the flora were terrestrial, not aquatic. "It has recently been proposed by a few uniformitarian geoscientists ... " Actually, they were the opposite: catastrophists. " ... that prehistoric human communities living adjacent to this body of water were rapidly displaced when the Mediterranean overflowed and filled the Black Sea with sal****er." That last is an accurate description of Ryan's and Pitman's BSFloode hypothesis, but that speculation has been tossed onto the refuse heap of scientific misadventure. Please allow me to grace you with my standard rant on this subject: Those who came up with the claim of catastrophic flooding of the Black Sea have retreated from that claim. It was based on the "sudden" appearance of salt-water shelly organisms deep in the Black Sea, but the claimants now agree that the "sudden" immigration of such shells just marks a change from freshwater to salty water deep below the surface of the Black Sea, and didn't involve any change in the level of the surface of the Black Sea, i.e. it does not mark any "flooding" of the Black Sea at all. And there is abundant evidence that at the time of the supposed "BSFlood" the level of the Black Sea was the same as, or higher than, the level of the Mediterranean Sea (which was supposed to have broken through an imaginary dam in the Bosphorus and overflowed into the Black sea basin). Ergo, the Black Sea was overflowing into the Mediterranean Sea at the time of the supposed "catastrophic flood", i.e., the water was actually flowing in the opposite direction. Ryan and Pitman got it backwards. At best. ENGAGE RANT MODE Sorry, there was no sudden flood in the Black Sea basin. It was all a publicist's dream. Parts of the modern Black Sea Flood claim are total fantasy, like the imaginary dam that supposedly broke 7500 years ago. Somebody wrote that down, and suddenly it was established as a "fact". The trouble is, altogether too many people have the mistaken idea that a catastrophic flood in the Black Sea was the inspiration for the Noah's Flood story in the Bible. The TV programs on that topic are outdated and overly sensational and can be safely ignored. Sadly, you, and maybe millions of other people, have been misled on this subject. Alas, there was no "Noachian" Black Sea Flood, and the science in William Ryan's and Walter Pitman's book "Noah's Flood: the event that changed history" has in several cases been superceded by better information that indicates that there was no such event, and was in most cases preceded by evidence that indicated that there was no such event. Ryan and Pitman set out to overturn the orthodox view of the history of the Black Sea, but they have apparently abandoned their hypothesis, if more recent articles co-authored by Ryan are any indication. The orthodox view has prevailed, subject to some recent modifications. There is evidence that there was an _outflow_ southward from the Black Sea through the Bosphorus into the Mediterranean from more than 10000 years ago (well before Ryan and Pitman's initial 5600 BCE flood date), continuously until the present day, though there may have been a relatively short interruption. And evidence from the south shore of the Black sea shows that the level of the Black Sea was only 18 m below the present level at the time of the supposed flood. The more recent claim by Ryan puts the flood date at 8400 BP, or about 9000 years ago, but then the "floodwaters" through the Bosphorus channel would have been only about 5 metres deep. 9000 years ago is when everybody else always thought that Mediterranean sal****er first entered the Black Sea. At about that time, the last phase of Glacial Lake Agassiz, in central Canada, finally found an outlet to the sea through or under the remnants of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, and so out into the North Atlantic, raising sea level an appreciable amount, and _perhaps_ triggering a sudden inflow of sal****er into the Black Sea basin. But probably not sudden or great enough to inspire a Noachian Flood myth. Better candidates are widespread inundation of low-lying parts of the Persian Gulf associated with the final draining of Glacial Lake Agassiz, and similar flooding of the Tigris- Euphrates delta, and (most likely) simultaneous flooding of the Tigris and Euphrates, which would have looked like a flooding of the entire world from the viewpoint of a person near present-day Baghdad. These candidates could each or all have inspired the flood myth in the epic of Gilgamesh, which predates the first known appearance of the Noachian Flood myth. Check this out, for a layman-friendly synopsis of the refutation: http://home.entouch.net/dmd/bseaflod.htm On the draining of Glacial Lake Agassiz: http://tinyurl.com/csmaq And here's a fairly recent news item on refutation of Ryan's and Pitman's hypothesis: BEGIN QUOTE January 14, 2003 Scientists are seriously challenging a recent, fascinating proposal that Noah's epic story -- setting sail with an ark jam-full of animal couples -- was based on an actual catastrophic flood that suddenly filled the Black Sea 7,500 years ago, forcing people to flee. In a detailed new look at the rocks, sediments, currents and seashells in and around the Black Sea, an international research team pooh-poohs the Noah flood idea, arguing that all the geologic, hydrologic and biologic signs are wrong. Little that the earth can tell us seems to fit the Noah story, they say. The new research takes direct aim at the work of two Columbia University geologists -- William Ryan and Walter Pitman -- whose proposal in 1997 ignited much new interest, and much new research, into Middle East history and geology. END QUOTE Also, Ballard did not find Noah's House, and he has recently admitted that he didn't find any evidence of human occupation of the Black Sea continental shelf, let alone any support for the BSFlood hypothesis. Here is another recent news article telling you about that (please be warned that several statements in the article are erroneous, e.g. "Scholars agree the Black Sea flooded when rising world sea levels caused the Mediterranean to burst over land and fill the then-freshwater lake."): "Black Sea Trip Yields No Flood Conclusions" http://tinyurl.com/eylm8 There was no actual ruined building found by Ballard, but rather just a partly rectangular outline of raised bed on the continental shelf, that might even be the outline of the wheelhouse of a modern freighter. To the northwest the outline continues, and narrows to a point. To the southeast, the outline continues for a shorter distance, and ends in a rounded curve. Just what you'd expect when a sunken ship's hull is covered with sediment. The wood didn't necessarily contaminate the site, it might have been part of the ship, and so accurately dates the site. The roughly-worked stones could have been the ship's ballast. If you wish, I can supply links to the writeups on Ballard's finds in professional journals. And here are a couple of scientific papers: "Is the abrupt drowning of the Black Sea shelf at 7150 yr BP a myth?" http://tinyurl.com/blart "Persistent Holocene Outflow from the Black Sea to the Eastern Mediterranean Contradicts Noah's Flood Hypothesis" http://tinyurl.com/65yxu And there's lots more, but you'd need access to scientific journals to read it, but you could ask me for more details if you want them. Some of the articles are available on the Web. DISENGAGE RANT MODE Sorry to splash water in the frying pan. Daryl Krupa |
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