First of , Der Alter, have you explored any of these attempts? Secondly, not everyone involved here is a scholar. There are many online website managed by self-styled apologists who do claim to have reconciled these, but have only published the unqualified judgments of unqualified people. Secondly, you need to review the arguments for there being contradictions here. I have already shared two basic ones above: that the chronologies conflict and that the texts were written by two different scribes at two different times. There is no way around those facts. For example, let me review the main arguments for denying a contradiction here. There is the two-creation theory. Gen. 1 talks about creation in general, whereas Gen. 2 talks of a second creation account, that is, what went in the Garden of Eden, after all the rest was created. The main problem here is how to account for all of the personnel that are involved in the story. During the Middle Ages, the answer was to give Adam two wives. The first wife (the woman in Gen. 1), Lilith, was Adam's first wife. Trouble was, she liked to have sex riding Adam. Neither he nor God liked that. So God gave a second wife, Eve, who was more submissive. Lilith ran away, became a witch, and goes around terrorizing children. Hence, more than one cradle had "God save us from Lilith" written on it. Nothing, however, was said about the identity of the man created before Adam. If you go for this is story, fine. But I sure don't. Among other things, it fails to honor the fact these two texts represent a major difference in literary style, which puts Gen. 2 having written long before Gen.1. Next is the pluperfect theory. Everything in Gen. 2 has been mistranslated, put in the wrong tense. It should all be in the pluperfect. So the line should read "...so God had created the animals." Everything, then, could be easily referred to Gen. 1. Only problem is, there is no pluperfect tense in Hebrew. Next is the hidden-chronology theory. The author of Gen. 2 (the same author as that f Gen. 2) had in mind the Gen. 1 chronology as the real one; but somehow, for the purposes of explicating Gen. 1, he started jumping around in the chronology. Problem is, we have no way of looking into the mind of the imaginary scribe here, to see if that is true. And how do you know which chronology this scriber had in mind? What's to say but that he didn't have Gen. 2 in mind as his real chronology? And exactly why would an author do that anyway? A similar theory is the flash theory. The author here was simply presenting sudden flash forwards or flash backwards. But the texts how none of this, and it makes no sense why an author would do that here. Now if you or anyone else wants to argue there is a single unified account here, let him step forth and provide a rebuttal to what I have just said.