Is it possible that the biblical legend known as Noah, the fantasy city known as Atlantis and one of the first great civilizations (known as Babylon) are all inter-related?
So we all know (or as the scientists say) that about fourteen thousand years ago, the last ice age was starting to end and the glaciers long frozen were thawing and releasing great amounts of water back into the ocean.
Around this time the civilization of men was not even a civilization -- far from it (about seven thousand years away, IIRC). Around this time, land bridges including the Bering Straight that scientists assume were one of the methods that humans got into the Americas were starting to close and sink under the waters.
These land bridges usually appeared in gulfs or straits where the water level was much more shallow than the current sea level. Two other such major places were the Red Sea and the Gulf of Persia (not including the Americas, which you will see why eventually).
The Gulf of Persia leveled out pretty smoothly with the help of the Tigris and the Euphrates feeding it. However, the Red Sea was not such the case. Becase the Red Sea was gap created by the drifting apart of the Arabian and African Plates, there are ledges blocking the Mediterrainian Sea and the Indian Ocean from filling it up. As well, there are no major rivers feeding it.
Think of how the Red Sea must have been while the Ice Age was starting to end. A nice wetlands with seasonal floods. The perfect place for a civilization, becuase the conditions were ripe. So, naturally, humans who were ahead of there time started agriculture, farming, and irrigation (as Civilization III says so well
) very gradually, like any civilization starts.
But if civilizations start there, why are humans still hunter-gatherers for the next 7000-9000 years?
"Noah" was most likely someone who was at the right place at the right time. He traveled to the southern edge of what was to become the Red Sea and saw that the waters of the Indian Ocean were starting to seep in. Eventually, they will break through a dam-like structure created by the rift between the two plates. So he created a giant boat.
A big storm happened, and the ocean finally broke through. Within a day (a week at most), the Red Sea leveled. Noah lived to tell the story, which passed through oral tradition. Of course, the story changed a lot through multiple tellings, as Oral Tradition always does.
So...if you had just witness a giant wall of water swallowing the only civilization just as it started, what would you think? Ignoring the bible, you would think that the Gods did not want cities, agriculture, specialized labor, etc. So, people lived from then on under the shadow of the city that was laughed upon by the Gods.
Atlantis. It possibly was not a high-tech modern city, but just the first one in an age of the hunter-gatherer. The story might have spread throughout the entire world (except for the Americas). People started associating its location with ones familiar, and eventually it became somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean.
Eventually, a long time later, some people decided to build a city, still under the shadow of the smoten city. But they decided to make it so high that not even flood waters could reach it. It was known as Babel, (from the Bible, of course. You didn't think a Christian would completely dismiss it from the whole story, right?) and from it grew Babylon.
Yay. Too bad I found this in a science fiction novel.
So can someone clear this up and explain the validity of this story?
Bibliography: Pastwatch - The Redemption of Christopher Columbus by Orson Scott Card (which is convientiently a science fiction)
So we all know (or as the scientists say) that about fourteen thousand years ago, the last ice age was starting to end and the glaciers long frozen were thawing and releasing great amounts of water back into the ocean.
Around this time the civilization of men was not even a civilization -- far from it (about seven thousand years away, IIRC). Around this time, land bridges including the Bering Straight that scientists assume were one of the methods that humans got into the Americas were starting to close and sink under the waters.
These land bridges usually appeared in gulfs or straits where the water level was much more shallow than the current sea level. Two other such major places were the Red Sea and the Gulf of Persia (not including the Americas, which you will see why eventually).
The Gulf of Persia leveled out pretty smoothly with the help of the Tigris and the Euphrates feeding it. However, the Red Sea was not such the case. Becase the Red Sea was gap created by the drifting apart of the Arabian and African Plates, there are ledges blocking the Mediterrainian Sea and the Indian Ocean from filling it up. As well, there are no major rivers feeding it.
Think of how the Red Sea must have been while the Ice Age was starting to end. A nice wetlands with seasonal floods. The perfect place for a civilization, becuase the conditions were ripe. So, naturally, humans who were ahead of there time started agriculture, farming, and irrigation (as Civilization III says so well

But if civilizations start there, why are humans still hunter-gatherers for the next 7000-9000 years?
"Noah" was most likely someone who was at the right place at the right time. He traveled to the southern edge of what was to become the Red Sea and saw that the waters of the Indian Ocean were starting to seep in. Eventually, they will break through a dam-like structure created by the rift between the two plates. So he created a giant boat.
A big storm happened, and the ocean finally broke through. Within a day (a week at most), the Red Sea leveled. Noah lived to tell the story, which passed through oral tradition. Of course, the story changed a lot through multiple tellings, as Oral Tradition always does.
So...if you had just witness a giant wall of water swallowing the only civilization just as it started, what would you think? Ignoring the bible, you would think that the Gods did not want cities, agriculture, specialized labor, etc. So, people lived from then on under the shadow of the city that was laughed upon by the Gods.
Atlantis. It possibly was not a high-tech modern city, but just the first one in an age of the hunter-gatherer. The story might have spread throughout the entire world (except for the Americas). People started associating its location with ones familiar, and eventually it became somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean.
Eventually, a long time later, some people decided to build a city, still under the shadow of the smoten city. But they decided to make it so high that not even flood waters could reach it. It was known as Babel, (from the Bible, of course. You didn't think a Christian would completely dismiss it from the whole story, right?) and from it grew Babylon.
Yay. Too bad I found this in a science fiction novel.
So can someone clear this up and explain the validity of this story?
Bibliography: Pastwatch - The Redemption of Christopher Columbus by Orson Scott Card (which is convientiently a science fiction)