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© 1999 Prison Fellowship
| December 27, 1999 |
No.91227 |
Prehistoric Beaches
Evidence for the Flood
This past summer, scientists found the remains of a prehistoric beach. What made this
find noteworthy was that the beach was at the bottom of the Black Sea - 550 feet beneath the surface.
The beach is causing scientists to consider what was previously unthinkable: the
biblical account of the Flood is based on an actual historical event.
Geological
studies of the Black Sea basin off the coast of Turkey led two Columbia
University geologists, William Ryan and Walter Pitman, to theorize that they may
have discovered the geological event that spawned the flood narrative in the
book of Genesis.
According to the theory, 7,500 years ago, the Black Sea was a freshwater lake. Then, at
the end of the last Ice Age, water levels in the Mediterranean rose. Eventually,
the water poured over the Bosporus Strait at a volume 200 times that of Niagara
Falls, inundating an area the size of the state of Florida. This flood created
the Black Sea as we know it today, and Pitman and Ryan believe it is the
historical basis for the biblical flood narrative.
The National Geographic Society wanted to find out if the geologists were correct. They approached
Robert Ballard, the oceanographer who was the first man to explore the wreck of
the Titanic, about leading the expedition.
Ballard was initially skeptical. He compared the project to, in his words,
"searching for arks on mountaintops" - the domain of religious
fanatics, not scientists.
Ballard eventually agreed to lead the expedition. When sonar detected the beach at the
bottom of the Black Sea, Ballard knew they were on the right track. Then, just
weeks ago, came the most exciting discovery to date: the remains of freshwater
mollusks on that beach - proof that Pitman and Ryan were right about a prehistoric flood.
Ballard now plans to look for the remains of human civilization at the bottom of the
Black Sea. As Frank Hiebert, the chief archaeologist on the project, says,
finding this kind of evidence would be very cool.
That's an understatement. While the expedition can't prove or disprove the truth of the
biblical account, it is the latest, and possibly, greatest, in a series of
scientific discoveries that are changing the way scientists look at biblical
narratives.
Sonar detected a beach at the bottom of the Black Sea.
Until recently, biblical narratives such as the accounts of King David's reign and the
Flood were considered little more than legend or myth. Scientists assumed that
they had little, if any, basis in history.
But, recent discoveries are causing archaeologists to re-examine their assumptions
about the historicity of these narratives.
The exciting discoveries in Turkey are yet
another reminder that Christians have nothing to fear from archaeology or the
other sciences. If, like Ballard, scientists approach the evidence without
prejudice, they will discover that it corroborates biblical accounts.
So, the next time someone tells you that the Bible is nothing more than fairy tale
and myths, tell them what Robert Ballard found at the bottom of the Black Sea.
It's evidence that the only thing that stands between an archaeologist and the truth
is an open mind.
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