Is Noahs Ark scientifically proven?

Revelation 18:21

Then a strong angel took up a stone like a great millstone and threw it into the sea, saying, "So will Babylon, the great city, be thrown down with violence, and will not be found any longer.


It is possible that a series of asteroids could have caused the Toba eruptions and mega tsunamis across ancient Mesopotamia. However, there is no definitive evidence to support this hypothesis.


The Toba supervolcano erupted around 74,000 years ago, depositing ash and smoke into the atmosphere that blocked out the sun for several years. This caused a global cooling event that is thought to have wiped out up to 60% of the human population at the time.

There is also evidence of mega tsunamis that struck Mesopotamia around the same time as the Toba eruption. These tsunamis may have been caused by asteroid impacts in the Gulf of Oman. However, the evidence for this is not conclusive.

These scientists found tools at the Gulf of Oman but no bones. Where did they go!?"where are the bones?'


In 2004, a team of scientists led by Don E. Davis of the University of Arizona published a paper in the journal Nature suggesting that the Toba eruption may have been caused by a meteorite impact. The scientists found evidence of a large crater, about 10 kilometers in diameter, located near the Toba volcano. They believe that the crater was created by a meteorite impact that occurred about 75,000 years ago, and that the impact may have triggered the Toba eruption.

However, other scientists have disputed the Davis team's findings. They argue that the crater is not evidence of a meteorite impact, but is instead a caldera, which is a large depression formed by the collapse of a volcano's summit. They also argue that there is no evidence that the Toba eruption was caused by a single event, and that it may have been caused by a combination of factors, including tectonic activity and magma chamber instability.


It is possible that a combination of factors, including the Toba eruption and asteroid impacts, caused the mega tsunamis that struck Mesopotamia. However, more research is needed to determine the exact cause of these events.

Here are some of the evidences that support the hypothesis that a series of asteroids could have caused the Toba eruptions and mega tsunamis across ancient Mesopotamia:

  • There is evidence of asteroid impacts in the Gulf of Oman around the time of the Toba eruption.

  • The Toba eruption and asteroid impacts could have combined to cause a series of mega tsunamis that struck Mesopotamia.

  • The mega tsunamis could have caused widespread flooding and destruction in Mesopotamia.

However, there are also some evidences that contradict the hypothesis:

  • There is no direct evidence that the asteroid impacts caused the Toba eruptions.

  • The asteroid impacts may have been caused by other factors, such as volcanic activity.

  • The mega tsunamis may have been caused by other factors, such as earthquakes.


Overall, the evidence for and against the hypothesis that a series of asteroids could have caused the Toba eruptions and mega tsunamis across ancient Mesopotamia is inconclusive. More research is needed to determine the exact cause of these events.


A study published in the journal Nature in 2016 suggests that all modern humans and 9 of 10 animals may be descended from just two people and pairs of animals who lived 100,000 to 200,000 years ago. These dates have wide error bars so could be much earlier. The study, which was conducted by researchers at the University of Basel in Switzerland, analyzed the genetic data of over 1,000 people from around the world. The researchers found that all of the people they studied shared a common ancestor who lived between 100,000 and 200,000 years ago. The study also concludes 9 of 10 animals came from a single pair at the same time.This suggests that all modern humans may have descended from a pair of survivors of a catastrophic event that almost wiped out the entire human race.

The researchers believe that the catastrophic event may have been a volcanic eruption, an asteroid impact, or a change in climate. Whatever the cause, the event would have killed off most of the human population, leaving only a small group of survivors. These survivors would have then gone on to repopulate the Earth, and all modern humans and 9 of 10 animals are descended from them.

The study's findings have important implications for our understanding of human evolution. They suggest that all modern humans are more closely related than previously thought, and that our species came very close to extinction in the distant past. The study also raises questions about the nature of the catastrophic event that almost wiped out the human race. What was the event? When did it happen? And why did it happen? These are questions that scientists are still trying to answer.

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/276717v1


"When you have eliminated all which is impossible then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." - Sherlock Holmes



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