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Where are the current ripples from Noah's Flood?

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stevevw

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@stevevw

Your last two responses to me are the classic ‘Proof by Verbosity’ fallacy.
Do you think wall to wall text enhances your arguments or was it designed to obfuscate the issue?
No its designed to explain the evidence.
Creationists in particular like to use a variation of this fallacy known as the Gish Gallop and the standard countermeasure is to focus only on the weakest argument.
This proved difficult because your posts contain a myriad of very weak arguments some of which are totally false but in the end I decided to pick this one.

This was your response when I refuted your claim there are cities in the Amazon that are 8000-20000 years old.

I hate to rain on your parade but the Middle East is not in the Amazon and you can’t even get your arithmetic right.
In your link on Byblos which incidentally is located in Lebanon and not in the Amazon, it explicitly states the region was first settled between 8800 – 7000 BC but “During the 3rd millennium BC, the first signs of a town can be observed, with the remains of well-built houses of uniform size. This was the period when the Canaanite civilization began to develop.”
So if the city first appeared in the 3rd millennium BC it cannot any older than around 5000 years.

Your failure to differentiate between a settlement and a city is an equivocation fallacy and symptomatic of your posts in general, where comments are based on opinion and facts distorted to conform with the opinion.
Like I said the idea that we must find a city to prove that people back then had sophisticated beliefs that could create a flood myth is a strawman. I mentioned that there were cities back 8 to 10,000 years ago to show that people were more advanced than given credit as part of showing they were more advanced.

If the city was first settled around 10,000 years ago then they were no longer nomad hunter gatherers. Thisd was the beginning of settling into groups where religious beliefs grew. That coincides with worship Temples like Gobekli Tepe which also shows more organisation into communities of worship.

But it doesn't matter because that is not the only evidence. It also comes from their own structures and drawings on pillars and walls which show their religious complexity. So none of this disproves what I said. Your creating a strawman and red herring.

Get back to the point which is that there were people around at the time of a major flood around 10,000 years ago who were religious and may be the source of Flood myths. .
 
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dlamberth

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Yes I agree. But I think we can nartrow down some contenders that may account for the high degree of consistency in the flood stories. If there was a super doper flood in the recent past that may align with beliefs.

It seems to me a pretty major flood event, in fact the greatest flood event since humans could be so sophisticated with their beliefs to have such a belief about such a major event that would have probably affected most of the world back then was the Younger Dryas flood.
The Biblical Flood story is a middle-eastern story. I'm not seeing where the Younger Dryas Flood reached that part of the globe. It seemed to have the most impact on North America as well as the North Atlantic Current which threw Europe into a cold spell. I understand that your looking at the possibilities of flood stores in various indigenous cultures. But I'm confused if your making the connection of the Younger Dryas Floods to the Biblical Flood story as well. If you are could you explain what your seeing there? Because I'm not seeing a connection.
 
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sjastro

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No its designed to explain the evidence.

Like I said the idea that we must find a city to prove that people back then had sophisticated beliefs that could create a flood myth is a strawman. I mentioned that there were cities back 8 to 10,000 years ago to show that people were more advanced than given credit as part of showing they were more advanced.

If the city was first settled around 10,000 years ago then they were no longer nomad hunter gatherers. Thisd was the beginning of settling into groups where religious beliefs grew. That coincides with worship Temples like Gobekli Tepe which also shows more organisation into communities of worship.

But it doesn't matter because that is not the only evidence. It also comes from their own structures and drawings on pillars and walls which show their religious complexity. So none of this disproves what I said. Your creating a strawman and red herring.

Get back to the point which is that there were people around at the time of a major flood around 10,000 years ago who were religious and may be the source of Flood myths. .
You are not going to weasel your way out of this one; I want you to explain the rationale of using a link on Byblos to explain why 'cities' in the Amazon are 8000-20000 years old.
This blatant piece of quote mining is not unique as every other link you have suppled in responding to my posts is also quote mined.

Quote mining is highly disingenuous and individuals who use it must think readers are illiterate or plain stupid to fall for this deception.
 
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dlamberth

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I don't approach the story of Noah's Ark as a literal historical account. Instead, I see it as a powerful allegory, rich in symbolism about God's mercy, humanity's capacity for both good and evil, and the promise of renewal. It speaks to deeper truths about our relationship with the divine and the importance of living a righteous life.
I can agree with your take on the Biblical Flood story. And in a similar way I even find spiritual food in the Genesis Creation story in the sense that every soul is an activity of God. What a Blessing that is! But...this subforum is for the discussion of "Physical Science". And that was the trajectory I took with the OP.
 
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stevevw

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The Biblical Flood story is a middle-eastern story. I'm not seeing where the Younger Dryas Flood reached that part of the globe. It seemed to have the most impact on North America as well as the North Atlantic Current which threw Europe into a cold spell. I understand that your looking at the possibilities of flood stores in various indigenous cultures. But I'm confused if your making the connection of the Younger Dryas Floods to the Biblical Flood story as well. If you are could you explain what your seeing there? Because I'm not seeing a connection.
The biblical flood is repeated in many cultures around the world with many similarities. Its not just a middle eastern story. We are trying to determine whether there was an actual major event that caused these stories.

I'm not worried about the truth of the biblical story at present. Just whether there was an actual event that it is based on.

As one of the links mentions the Younger Dryas event was of a global scale so much of the norther hemisphere would have been affected. It was enough to wipe out Megafauna.

As one of the links says part of the effects of the YD happened only 150 milies from Gobekli Tepe so it must have been affected. The seas have risen an estimated anywhere from 100 to 200 feet over a 500 year period but some of that was sudden.

Hense we have cities under water along the coast and sand covered cities in the desert as a result. If large parts of the glacier melted pretty quickly causing millions and millions of litres of water into the artic sea then its going to run down all directions into the northern hemisphere.
 
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stevevw

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You are not going to weasel your way out of this one; I want you to explain the rationale of using a link on Byblos to explain why 'cities' in the Amazon are 8000-20000 years old.
This blatant piece of quote mining is not unique as every other link you have suppled in responding to my posts is also quote mined.

Quote mining is highly disingenuous and individuals who use it must think readers are illiterate or plain stupid to fall for this deception.
I am not trying to weasel out of anything. What do you think I am trying to get out of. That I said cities existed around 8 to 20,000 years ago. But how is cities existing that far back going to refute what I said. Are you just trying to get a 'Got yah' moment. Or is this going to prove what I am saying is wrong.

There is a debate about what is classed as a city to begin with. Obviously as there were way less people back then there are not going to be what we call cities around. But the evidence with the use of monoliths, temples, pyramid and other geometric shapes and astrology make them a highly organised people. In other words like the Egyptians they have a vast amount of people working together in what would be regarded as a city considering the smaller population.

For example to even move and lift the 800 ton blocks you either need ingumuity or a lot of manpower. That means people where coming together in comunities already. They may not have had mass argriculture but did so as group like villages within the greater whole.

Like with the Amazon cultures it was found that rather than one big central city a vast area was set out in grids with large groups dispersed but also connected and coming together. Together they may have reach million people and formed a a sort of city State.

It has only been in recent times that these discoveries have been made and further investigation needs to be done. Thats why I did not want to focus on that as its not a solid support. The main cultures affected were around the middle east, parts of Europe and Russia and north America and it is these cultures that go back to around the time of the giant flood event.

But if you want to persist with this red herring then yes the evidence suggests a highly organised people working together in the Amazon around 10,000 years ago. They never built big cities because in many places there were no stone. But if there were they probably would have built similar to other monolithic cultures.

But we can see how they were organised by how they mapped the land in grids and geoglyphs for either religious or communal purposes. Or how they cultivated the land and grew crops within organised grids. This shows that 1,000s of people were involved and they were much more organised than hunter gatherers.

But this has only been discovered in recent years thanks to Lidar and further investigation is needed. They have found something like 24,000 objects through the Amazon so its going to take some time to work all this out.

How ghost cities in the Amazon are rewriting the story of civilisation

The geoglyph sites of Acre, Brazil: 10 000-year-old land-use practices and climate change in Amazonia

 
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Astrid

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The Biblical Flood story is a middle-eastern story. I'm not seeing where the Younger Dryas Flood reached that part of the globe. It seemed to have the most impact on North America as well as the North Atlantic Current which threw Europe into a cold spell. I understand that your looking at the possibilities of flood stores in various indigenous cultures. But I'm confused if your making the connection of the Younger Dryas Floods to the Biblical Flood story as well. If you are could you explain what your seeing there? Because I'm not seeing a connection.
Dryas flood, or floods?
 
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Astrid

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I can agree with your take on the Biblical Flood story. And in a similar way I even find spiritual food in the Genesis Creation story in the sense that every soul is an activity of God. What a Blessing that is! But...this subforum is for the discussion of "Physical Science". And that was the trajectory I took with the OP.
Seriously. Let’s not reply to derail posts, however well meant they may be.
 
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BCP1928

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Astrid

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The biblical flood is repeated in many cultures around the world with many similarities. Its not just a middle eastern story. We are trying to determine whether there was an actual major event that caused these stories.

I'm not worried about the truth of the biblical story at present. Just whether there was an actual event that it is based on.

As one of the links mentions the Younger Dryas event was of a global scale so much of the norther hemisphere would have been affected. It was enough to wipe out Megafauna.

As one of the links says part of the effects of the YD happened only 150 milies from Gobekli Tepe so it must have been affected. The seas have risen an estimated anywhere from 100 to 200 feet over a 500 year period but some of that was sudden.

Hense we have cities under water along the coast and sand covered cities in the desert as a result. If large parts of the glacier melted pretty quickly causing millions and millions of litres of water into the artic sea then its going to run down all directions into the northern hemisphere.
Sudden sea level rise, and cities underwater.

The average rate of sea level rise over
the past 20,000 years has been a surging 6mm
per year.

Sudden?
Actual dates and numbers?

Care to supply reference?
Something legit and on topic?
 
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Astrid

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You are not going to weasel your way out of this one; I want you to explain the rationale of using a link on Byblos to explain why 'cities' in the Amazon are 8000-20000 years old.
This blatant piece of quote mining is not unique as every other link you have suppled in responding to my posts is also quote mined.

Quote mining is highly disingenuous and individuals who use it must think readers are illiterate or plain stupid to fall for this deception.
I think it really does fool the miners
 
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Fervent

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When "reasonable" people argue with people who have clearly given up reason, they only prove themselves to be fools. There's not really much sense in arguing about what the evidence(or lack of evidence, rather) for Noah's flood indicates since people who believe in Noah's flood don't do so on the basis of empirical data. No matter how good of an argument you make against the idea of a global flood, it doesn't make you look like any less of a fool when you engage with people who are convinced that the text of the Bible is the inerrant word of God and the only way to understand it is as a literal scientific account of history. It's not science vs science, or reason vs reason. It's just shouting into the wind.
 
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sjastro

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I am not trying to weasel out of anything. What do you think I am trying to get out of. That I said cities existed around 8 to 20,000 years ago. But how is cities existing that far back going to refute what I said. Are you just trying to get a 'Got yah' moment. Or is this going to prove what I am saying is wrong.
Then why don’t you explain the reasoning behind using a link on Byblos as an explanation for cities in the Amazon being 8000-20,000 years ago.

There is a debate about what is classed as a city to begin with. Obviously as there were way less people back then there are not going to be what we call cities around. But the evidence with the use of monoliths, temples, pyramid and other geometric shapes and astrology make them a highly organised people. In other words like the Egyptians they have a vast amount of people working together in what would be regarded as a city considering the smaller population.
There is no debate, the problem is with you when you can’t even recognize that Göbekli Tepe for example was a meeting place for hunter gatherers not a Neolithic village let alone a city.
For example to even move and lift the 800 ton blocks you either need ingumuity or a lot of manpower. That means people where coming together in comunities already. They may not have had mass argriculture but did so as group like villages within the greater whole.

Like with the Amazon cultures it was found that rather than one big central city a vast area was set out in grids with large groups dispersed but also connected and coming together. Together they may have reach million people and formed a a sort of city State.

It has only been in recent times that these discoveries have been made and further investigation needs to be done. Thats why I did not want to focus on that as its not a solid support. The main cultures affected were around the middle east, parts of Europe and Russia and north America and it is these cultures that go back to around the time of the giant flood event.
Here we go again with this Gish Gallop.
The only point worth responding to yet again, a great flood would have occurred at the same time in different regions, yet as the evidence shows this did not happen making them regional events.
You have this mindset when a refutation is made simply ignore it and carry on regardless as if it never existed.
But if you want to persist with this red herring then yes the evidence suggests a highly organised people working together in the Amazon around 10,000 years ago. They never built big cities because in many places there were no stone. But if there were they probably would have built similar to other monolithic cultures.

But we can see how they were organised by how they mapped the land in grids and geoglyphs for either religious or communal purposes. Or how they cultivated the land and grew crops within organised grids. This shows that 1,000s of people were involved and they were much more organised than hunter gatherers.

But this has only been discovered in recent years thanks to Lidar and further investigation is needed. They have found something like 24,000 objects through the Amazon so its going to take some time to work all this out.
Ten thousand years ago the Amazonian inhabitants were hunter gatherers who also used “incipient horticulture” which was a slow transition to full scale agriculture occurring 2000 – 4000 years ago leading to the organization structures you describe.
You are thousands of years off the mark.

How ghost cities in the Amazon are rewriting the story of civilisation

The geoglyph sites of Acre, Brazil: 10 000-year-old land-use practices and climate change in Amazonia

Absolutely amazing you have reverted to quote mining repeating the first and third links which have been refuted as they do not support the case of 8000-20,000 year old cities existing in the Amazon.
It proves my point made earlier you will simply ignore anything which is refuted.

With regards to the second link comes the standard question do you bother even trying to read your links given the age of the geoglyphs themselves are considerably younger than the 10,000 year old land use practices in the regions.
"Calibrated radiocarbon dates indicate that the first Acre earthworks were initiated by c. 2500 BP, with construction continuing until 1000 BP."

So once again we have another quote mine that contradicts Amazon cities were 8000-20,000 years old not that it matters even if they were 10,000 years old is not evidence for the existence of cities.
 
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stevevw

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Yes, but your certainty on the point suggested that you might have a reference that was less "controversial."
What do you mean less controversial. There's nothing controversial. Its just plain and simple fact.
 
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Astrid

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What do you mean less controversial. There's nothing controversial. Its just plain and simple fact.
As Anton Chigurh put it, “You should just admit your situation. There’d be more dignity in it.”
 
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stevevw

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Sudden sea level rise, and cities underwater.

The average rate of sea level rise over
the past 20,000 years has been a surging 6mm
per year.

Sudden?
Actual dates and numbers?

Care to supply reference?
Something legit and on topic?
The avergae is not the rate seas levels rose. Thats like saying a dripping tap fills the sink at the same rate as a bucket of water being poured into the sink.

Because there was a sudden heating of the earth where temperatures rose something like 10 degrees in a matter of a decade ot two water often pooled up in dams and then broke and spilled into the sea quickly raising levels in a matter of days and weeks.

I remember the Brisbane floods where water was overflowing the dams and they had to release some. It took only days and this overflowed all rivers and the Brisbane river itself flooding vast areas. As the water dammed an then broke in catchment areas it washed entire towns away in its path.


That was only from a small dam but imagine dammed up water from a dam as big as a small nation then released into the sea. This is going to raise the levels quickly in a matter of weeks.

What we are talking about here is not the normal gradual global warming of ice melt. But an event, a disaster than happened which caused the sudden melting and flooding around 10,000 years ago. At the time cultures like Gobekli Tepe were around.
 
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BCP1928

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What do you mean less controversial. There's nothing controversial. Its just plain and simple fact.
Even Sweatman didn't claim that much certainly, and he admitted that his views were controversial.
 
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stevevw

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Then why don’t you explain the reasoning behind using a link on Byblos as an explanation for cities in the Amazon being 8000-20,000 years ago.
Thats simple. Using Byblos as evidence for cities of people around 10,000 years ago is much simpler than using the Amazon because 1) theres more evidence and 2) its much closer to Gobekli Tepe which is the area we are talking about.

As I said I mentioned the Amazon as another area where evidence is being found for large groups of people being organised like small cities. But its still being investigated. But so far the evidence shows similar cultural practices to people like Gobekli Tepe and other monolithic cultures.

Why then go through the agony of debating that less established evidence for the Amazon when cultures around Gobekli Tepe have more evidence to prove the same point. Which is that there were cultures around back when a major flood event happened who were advanced enough in knowledge and religion to be the origin of the flood stories that came later in Mesopotamia and other cultures.
There is no debate, the problem is with you when you can’t even recognize that Göbekli Tepe for example was a meeting place for hunter gatherers not a Neolithic village let alone a city.
We don't know that. In fact what is found at Göbekli Tepeis only about 10% of whar is possibly there. There are many tells and other pillars jutting out that are yet to be discovered. It may be an entire network of temples and communal places.

What is my basic arguement. Its that the cultures around 10,000 years ago were far more advanced than scientists thought. That because of this advanced knowledge and religion were able to come up with the flood myths as a result of a real major flood event they all experienced or heard about.

Your attempts to create logical fallacies in trying and limit measuring that advancement to whether they were cities or any other single measure are false representations. It doesn't matter how we measure them. Whether they were more settled and communities or hunters and gathers or both.

None of that negates the fact that these people were advanced enough in knowledge and religion to be able to come up with the flood myth which takes a certain level of belief compared to hunter gatherers. The idea of trying to say they were only hunter gatherers is to make out these people were primitive. But I am saying the evidence shows they were far more advanced.

So therefore around 10,000 years ago there may have been many advanced cultures all worshipping their gods. There was a common belief associated with the skies, the stars and astrology and animals. But nonetheless it was an advanced belief that even paraelles with the Egyptians in some ways.

So a major flood event at that time will be seen as something from the gods and being it was a global event at least for large parts of the northern hemisphere and the most major flood at the beginning of when cultures had complex beliefs it trumps all other floods it may be the source of the flood myth.

In other words those flood myths would have been around well before any other floods. I cannot see how any culture at that time did not know of this flood event. If there was any myth to be made about floods it was at this time.
Here we go again with this Gish Gallop.
How is that Gish Gallop. I made the point that to make these monoliths it requires the organisation of 1,000s of people. Just like it took 1,000s of slaves organised by the Egyptians to build the Pyramids. So if it took 1,000s of organisied people working together than they must have been far more organised as far as culture and community is concerned. They were not simple primitive hunters and gatherers.

But of course you missed that point altogether and call it gish gallop. If you are calling my arguements gish gallop then how are we to even debate this.
The only point worth responding to yet again, a great flood would have occurred at the same time in different regions, yet as the evidence shows this did not happen making them regional events.
You have this mindset when a refutation is made simply ignore it and carry on regardless as if it never existed.
Well thats only natural to ignore it when its just a claim without one bit of supporting evidence. The fact is a major earth shattering flood event would be experienced by many cultures at the same time.

Heres the logic. If this is the case and its the most major and first flood event when humans became knowledgable and religious enough to make this story then no other flood will trump it that comes later for that same culture. If the majority of cultures were around at that time or come from these cultures back then, then there cannot be a greater source.

Especially when I have actually provided evidence of a massive world shaking flood event that could be the origin of all cultures flood myths. Especially when the finer details of the stories all match. That would seem unreal that several cultures just happen to come to the same story detail.
Ten thousand years ago the Amazonian inhabitants were hunter gatherers who also used “incipient horticulture” which was a slow transition to full scale agriculture occurring 2000 – 4000 years ago leading to the organization structures you describe.
You are thousands of years off the mark.
Actually the structures in the ground, the shapes could be 10,000 years old. They mimick the monolith structures in stone as far as geometry and astrology. So we don't know. These markings were found by lidar so they may represent a culture well before the later structures like the Aztecs and Mayans made. They maybe the Gobekli Tepe of the Amazon. But more work is needed.

Absolutely amazing you have reverted to quote mining repeating the first and third links which have been refuted as they do not support the case of 8000-20,000 year old cities existing in the Amazon.
It proves my point made earlier you will simply ignore anything which is refuted.
It depends what you mean by cities and why cities are so important to proving a culture is advanced to be able to have complex beliefs about a flood myth. Like I said the evidence so far suggests that these geometric and astrological shapes are sim,ilar to other monolith cultures. If thats the case then these involved well organised cultures working together and coming together in religious ceremonies and linked.

Possibly 1,000s or more linked in a common belief and cultural practices rather than seperate hunter gather groups unrelated. In that sense it becomes more a city of people working together though they may have been dispersed throughout the land.

But once again why focus on me meeting the criteria of a city to prove that these cultures were advanced. That is not the only evidence. In fact take out the idea of a city. Delete that from the criteria. Now lets get on with determining whether these cultures were advanced enough to be the origin of the flood myth.
With regards to the second link comes the standard question do you bother even trying to read your links given the age of the geoglyphs themselves are considerably younger than the 10,000 year old land use practices in the regions.
"Calibrated radiocarbon dates indicate that the first Acre earthworks were initiated by c. 2500 BP, with construction continuing until 1000 BP."

So once again we have another quote mine that contradicts Amazon cities were 8000-20,000 years old not that it matters even if they were 10,000 years old is not evidence for the existence of cities.
That is about later layers. Some of the earthworks go back 10,000 years. My arguement is based on what the shapes represent which aligns more with earlier monolith cultures.
“The mounds promoted landscape diversity, and show that small-scale communities began to shape the Amazon 8,000 years earlier than previously thought.”

Like I said the Amazon is a fairly new area of research and evidence is changing all the time. The only reason most of the discoveries have happened is due to land clearing. But there is little access for archeology.

But like I said forget about the entire Amazon if you want. It doesn't change my point that cultures were far more advanced than scientists thought and they had sophisticated beliefs when the most major flood in the last 10,000 years or so happened. Thus possibly the source for the Flood myth of most cultures.
 
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stevevw

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Even Sweatman didn't claim that much certainly, and he admitted that his views were controversial.
Lets see what I am claiming. That a great flood event happened around 10,000 years ago. This is proven fact.

That cultures back then were far more knowledgable and religious than we thought. This is proven fact.

That cultures back then had sophisticated beliefs that could come up with the flood myth. This is proven fact.

The only thing I have proposed and I have not said with "that much certainty" is that putting this together it may be the source of the Flood myth.

But even that is a fairly mainstream belief anyway.

I was going to elaborate on the last point which does require some spectulation as a hypothesis. But it seems we can't even get past proving that these cultures were in a position to be the source of the flood myth.
 
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