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Noah's flood : the new scientific discoveries about the event that changed history / William Ryan and Walter Pitman ; illustrations by Anastasia Sotiropoulos ; maps by William Haxby.

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: New York : Simon & Schuster, ©1998.Description: 319 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0684810522
  • 9780684810522
  • 0684859203
  • 9780684859200
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 930/.2 21
LOC classification:
  • BS658 .R93 1998
NLM classification:
  • 000110503
Other classification:
  • 930.1
Online resources:
Contents:
Deciphering the legend -- Conversions -- Visions of palaces -- The face of the deep -- Ur of the Chaldees -- Hidden river -- Gibraltar's waterfall -- Vanished deserts -- Pontus Axenus -- Red Hill -- Aquanauts -- Immigrants -- Close encounter -- Beachcombers -- Back of the envelope -- Anybody there? -- The diaspora -- Family trees -- The Guslar's song -- On a golden pond -- Other myths -- Epilogue : a telling of Atrahasis.
Summary: For thousands of years, the legend of a great flood has endured in the biblical story of Noah and in such Middle Eastern myths as the epic of Gilgamesh. Few believed that such a catastrophic deluge had actually occurred. But now geophysicists have discovered an event that changed history, a sensational flood 7,600 years ago in what is today the Black Sea. Using sound waves and coring devices to probe the sea floor, they discovered clear evidence that this inland body of water had once been a vast freshwater lake lying hundreds of feet below the level of the world's rising oceans. The authors explore the archaeological, genetic, and linguistic evidence suggesting that the flood rapidly created a human diaspora that spread as far as Western Europe, Central Asia, China, Egypt, and the Persian Gulf. They suggest that the Black Sea People could well have been the mysterious proto-Sumerians, who developed the first great civilization in Mesopotamia, the source of our own.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Academic Resource Center at Levitt General Stacks (LOWER Level) BS 658 .R93 1998 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 101949

Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-302) and index.

Deciphering the legend -- Conversions -- Visions of palaces -- The face of the deep -- Ur of the Chaldees -- Hidden river -- Gibraltar's waterfall -- Vanished deserts -- Pontus Axenus -- Red Hill -- Aquanauts -- Immigrants -- Close encounter -- Beachcombers -- Back of the envelope -- Anybody there? -- The diaspora -- Family trees -- The Guslar's song -- On a golden pond -- Other myths -- Epilogue : a telling of Atrahasis.

For thousands of years, the legend of a great flood has endured in the biblical story of Noah and in such Middle Eastern myths as the epic of Gilgamesh. Few believed that such a catastrophic deluge had actually occurred. But now geophysicists have discovered an event that changed history, a sensational flood 7,600 years ago in what is today the Black Sea. Using sound waves and coring devices to probe the sea floor, they discovered clear evidence that this inland body of water had once been a vast freshwater lake lying hundreds of feet below the level of the world's rising oceans. The authors explore the archaeological, genetic, and linguistic evidence suggesting that the flood rapidly created a human diaspora that spread as far as Western Europe, Central Asia, China, Egypt, and the Persian Gulf. They suggest that the Black Sea People could well have been the mysterious proto-Sumerians, who developed the first great civilization in Mesopotamia, the source of our own.

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