home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!att-out!rutgers!cmcl2!panix!mls
- From: mls@panix.com (Michael Siemon)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: More (verbal) Flooding of "the" flood
- Summary: Egypt & America
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.015904.4059@panix.com>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 01:59:04 GMT
- References: <12103@risky.Convergent.COM> <1992Nov16.164447.21120@linus.mitre.org> <1992Nov17.123322.9457@news.nd.edu>
- Organization: PANIX Public Access Unix & Internet, NYC
- Lines: 72
-
- In article <1992Nov17.123322.9457@news.nd.edu> scharle@lukasiewicz.cc.nd.edu (scharle) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov16.164447.21120@linus.mitre.org>, m23364@mwunix (James Meritt) writes:
-
- >|> _IF_ you assume accuracy in the part of the biblical description,
- >|> then the presence of 1 (one) non-flooded local on earth at the time would
- >|> be sufficient to show that it did not occur as described. I refer you to
- >|> a. The Aztec civilization
- >|> b. the Great Pyramid of Giza
- >|>
- >|> Both of these existed at the time of the so-called world-wide flood, ...
-
- > According to Bishop Ussher, the Flood occured in 2348 BCE. Remember that
- >there was a considerable time between Adam and the Flood -- Methuselah
- >alone lived 969 years.
- > As far as I can tell, the time of the building of the pyramids of Egypt
- >began around 2500 BCE and lasted a couple of hundred years ...
-
- The (major) pyramids began construction in the 3rd dynasty under Djoser
- (there were some minor earlier ones) generally dated from mid-27th century
- BCE (though I am told that recent excavation casts some doubts on the
- standard consensus, possibly putting things back a few centuries more),
- and the date of Khufu (Cheops) in the 4th dynasty (and thus the building
- of the Great Pyramid at Giza) was about 2500, as you say (but again with
- some possibility of its moving back a ways.)
-
- More to the point, the whole of the Old Kingdom left a record (now extant
- in the fragments of the Turin papyrus) has a record with Nile floods given
- for EACH year or each king. This takes us down to circa 2100, with nary
- a trace of even regional flooding, just the normal gentle yearly overflow
- in the Nile valley (with an interesting correlation that the breakup of
- the Old Kingdom, as in other periods of decline in Egypt, was associated
- with poor floods towards the end of this span.)
-
- >considerable problems with a world-wide catastrophic Flood having occurred
- >about then. There is also a continuous history in Mesopotamia covering
- >that era -- Sargon of Akkad began his reign somewhere aroud 2350 BCE.
-
- There are king lists for the Sumerian cities before (and after) Sargon,
- but nothing that would count as a "continuous history" of that region --
- not even like the Egyptian case (where we know some symbolic event for
- each [preserved] year in addition to the flood level, but basically no
- political or other incident that we'd *like* to know.) Here, the most
- interesting nexus of stuff concerns Gilgamesh who seems to take over as
- a quasi-historical figure from the Sumerian equivalent of Noah at about
- 3000 BCE. Given the prominence of *regional* flooding (disastrous in
- character, as opposed to the benign Nile flood) in some archaeological
- layers in southern Iraq at that time, this *may* be a historical seed
- of the Mesopotamian->Jewish flood myth.
-
- > However, I have doubts about the Aztec civilization beginning that
- >early. Does anyone have some dates on Mesoamerican civilizations?
-
- The Aztecs are *definitely* parvenus; they originate only a century or
- so before Cortez wiped them out. Of course they are heirs of more
- ancient Central American cultures, but even the earliest of these
- (Olmecs, for example) go back nowhere *near* as long as the Nile or
- Mesopotamian cases. The earliest historical records come in with the
- Mayans, not much over 2000 years ago. (The Mayan calendar has a long
- cycle stretching back much earlier, but that has no more historical
- meaning than the wild constructions of Hindu cyclical calendrics.)
- There are certainly no archaeological strata in Mexico confirming any
- putative global flood, either in historic or prehistoric times.
-
- Jim should stick to the instance of the pyramids (and generalize it
- to the whole of the first phase of Egyptian civilization, 1st dynasty
- through 6th) and not drag in red herrings like Mexico. The Egyptian
- case is quite sufficient to estalish his point.
- --
- Michael L. Siemon Inflict Thy promises with each
- mls@panix.com Occasion of distress,
- That from our incoherence we
- May learn to put our trust in Thee
-