|
Noah's
Home Address?
The
ancient beach and the mollusk shells left little doubt that
the Mediterranean Sea had flooded the Black Sea basin. But
had people witnessed it? And how cataclysmic was the change?
 |
 |
| |
Little
Hercules begins its
dive to the bottom of the Black Sea.
|
"It's
not clear how rapidly it happened," says Brendan Foley, a
student of Maritime Archeology at MIT's program for Science,
Technology and Society. " But,
if the flooding happened quickly, then there's a possibility
dwelling sites were inundated and the sites would have been
just covered with water and not beaten up by waves."
With
that hope in mind, the expedition searched for remains of
human settlements in the fall of 2000. The garbage heaps and
tools they discovered were significant finds. But for Ballard,
the Holy Grail was the remnants of a dwelling - what Ballard
and the others only half-jokingly referred to as "Noah's House"
- the surest sign of human presence. This time, Ballard and
his colleagues sailed back and forth in 100-meter deep waters,
over what would have been dry land before the flood, concentrating
on channels carved by the ancient rivers that fed the once
freshwater lake. Archaeologists familiar with the region suspect
that the once-dry land of river deltas would have been attractive
real estate for the farmers who may have lived here before
the flood.
Once
again, Ballard's team hit pay dirt.
 |
 |
|
Early
images from "Site 82," which may be remains of a human
dwelling destroyed by the flood.
|
|
"We
looked at I don't know how many dozens of square kilometers
of seafloor," recalls Foley. "We didn't see anything that
was similar to this. This really looked special."
Foley
refers to what the team calls "Site 82," a decidedly manmade
structure submerged in 95 meters of water, nestled between
the beds of two rivers that once fed the ancient freshwater
lake. The
researchers deployed the ROV called "Little Hercules" to obtain
images of the promising site. Stunned scientists stared at
the ship's monitors as the ROV sent back pictures of manmade
wooden beams, ceramic shards and stone tools. Disappointingly,
radiocarbon dating proved the wood to be too young to have
been the actual walls and roof of "Noah's house." However,
sediment samples collected from the site revealed what may
be a stone foundation similar to other Neolithic dwellings
found in the region. While scientists cannot say for certain
that Site 82 was a Neolithic dwelling before the flood, the
tantalizing possibility exists. Only further exploration will
tell for sure.
-
- - - - - - - - - - -
4
pages: | 1 | 2
| 3 | 4 |
Photos: National Geographic Society; Institute for Exploration

|