Noah's Ark flood spurred European farming -study
LONDON, Nov 18 (Reuters) An ancient flood some say could be the origin of the story of Noah's Ark may have helped the spread of agriculture in Europe 8,300 years ago by scattering the continent's earliest farmers, researchers said today.
Using radiocarbon dating and archaeological evidence, a British team showed the collapse of the North American ice sheet, which raised global sea levels by as much as 1.4 metres, displaced tens of thousands of people in southeastern Europe who carried farming skills to their new homes.
The researchers said in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews their study provides direct evidence linking the flood that breached a ridge keeping the Mediterranean apart from the Black Sea to the rise of farming in Europe.
''The flooding of the Black Sea was not well dated but we got it down to about 50 years,'' said Chris Turney, a geologist at the University of Exeter, who led the study. ''As soon as the flooding is done, farming goes crazy across Europe.'' The researchers created reconstructions of the Mediterranean and Black Sea shoreline before and after the rise in sea levels.
They estimated the flood covered some 73,000 square kilometres over a 34-year period, causing mass displacement of people.
Previous archaeological evidence has shown communities in the region were already farming when the flood hit. The Exeter team suggests the mass migration caused a sudden expansion of farming and pottery production across the continent.
''We looked at all the earliest data on farming in Europe and we found a little bit of farming in Greece and the Balkans just before the flood,'' Turney said in a telephone interview. ''When the flood happened, farming seemed to stop but it was reestablished a generation later across Europe.'' The researchers believe these people took their skills to new areas previously populated by hunters and gatherers where there had been no evidence of farming, Turney said.
The study also underscores the potential impact rising sea levels may have in the future, the researchers said. An expected one metre rise by the end of the century due to climate change would displace some 145 million people, Turney added.
It also paints a picture of the kind of mass disruption that has prompted some scientists to link the ancient flood to the origins of the biblical story of Noah's Ark, Turney said.
''When
the
Black
Sea
flooded
at
end
of
last
ice
age
some
people
have
suggested
it
was
the
origins
of
the
Noah's
Ark
myth,''
he
said.
''If
you
lived
in
that
basin
it
would
have
seemed
like
the
whole
world
had
flooded.''
REUTERS
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