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The Great Flood

Columbia University geologists William Ryan and Walter Pitman wondered what could explain the preponderance of flood legends—not just in the Bible but in other ancient sources as well.  They have advanced a theory that, as the Ice Age ended and glaciers melted, a wall of seawater surged from the Mediterranean into the Black Sea.

  • During the Ice Age, Ryan and Pitman argue, the Black Sea was an isolated freshwater lake surrounded by farmland.
  • About 12,000 years ago, toward the end of the Ice Age, Earth began growing warmer. Vast sheets of ice that sprawled over the Northern Hemisphere began to melt. Oceans and seas grew deeper as a result.
  • About 7,000 years ago the Mediterranean Sea swelled. Seawater pushed northward, slicing through what is now Turkey.
  • Funneled through the narrow Bosporus, the water hit the Black Sea with 200 times the force of Niagara Falls. Each day the Black Sea rose about six inches (15 centimeters), and coastal farms were flooded.
  • Seared into the memories of terrified survivors, the tale of the flood was passed down through the generations and eventually became the Noah story.

Now maritime explorer Bob Ballard is combing the floor of the Black Sea in search of the remains of ancient dwellings, which would buttress this new theory. Follow his progress at this intriguing site from National Geographic:

Ballard & the Black Sea: the Search for Noah's Flood

  This page was last edited on November 02, 2002

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