If I was an eskimo during the Great Flood, I could just carve a cave along the side of the iceberg. Bingo! instant shelter from wind, and rain. Actually, all I'd need to do is stretch a seal skin ceiling across a few logs, or blocks of ice and I'd have a rain proof shelter.
There's plenty of fresh water for drinking (after it stopped raining for 40 days i could melt ice). Plenty of fish in the ocean to eat. Survivability seems quite possible in this case. In addition, huge icebergs take years to melt, even in the hot sun.
Your thoughts?
2007-11-03
16:02:25
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21 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
To the postings describing huge waves destroying my iceberg:
Icebergs are impervious to huge waves didn't you know? Some are as large as small countries :)
2007-11-03
16:15:13 ·
update #1
To the postings describing different climatic conditions during Noah's time (the earth being free of ice), could you please explain where Polar bears, penguins, and Walrus's came from? Don't tell me they "evolved" (evolution) from other critters after the flood was over.
2007-11-03
16:24:57 ·
update #2
I never thought of it that way, but it seems to me that it would be a perfect shelter/way of surviving. Good thinking because as you stated, icebergs take years to melt and since it would be raining and its cold where the icebergs are, it wouldnt cause them to melt because wouldn't the rain freeze on the iceberg?
2007-11-03 16:07:52
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answer #1
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answered by Lights 3
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You are making the faulty assumption that the climate then was the same as the climate now, thus icebergs. What if the flood precipitated (pun intended) the climate change that produced the glaciations we now take for granted? What if the flood waters covered a previously mild climate over the entire globe? No safety in floating ice then. No, if there was a universal flood caused by God, then only eight humans survived, because the same God who designed the flood designed who would survive and how they would survive, and then told us about it.
Edit:
Wouldn't even think of polar bears "evolving" from other critters after the flood. Amusing proposal. There is better science in the concept of adaptation. That way the net genetic information of a species remains relatively constant, even though specific populations throw out some information and emphasize other information in order to cope with climatic or competitive changes in local habitats. In other words, polar bears are white bears that do well in the cold because those kinds of adaptations were incipiently available in the master gene pool for bears as a species. This principle of genetic potential for adaptation would work for the other cold weather species you mentioned as well. Furthermore, this type of adaptation has been experimentally verified. Evolution need not apply.
2007-11-03 16:20:36
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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"And every living substance was destroyed which was upon the face of the ground, both man, and cattle, and the creeping things, and the fowl of the heaven; and they were destroyed from the earth: and Noah only remained [alive], and they that [were] with him in the ark." (Gen 7:23)
According to that only Noah and they who were with him in the Ark survived the flood. I also see no reason to presuppose floating ice at that time, for the Bible says that all the high hills were covered which would probably include hills of ice, thus no floating icebergs. If however you must have icebergs floating around during the flood, that could yet be considered as a form of water prevailing, but it's unlikely since the original land was one mass whose mountains of ice would have fallen on itself, not in the ocean. Suboceanic volcanic activity would also have likely risen the temperature of the overall flood waters to the melting point of any supposed floating ice, but not enough to kill all the fish. As for polar bears, penguins, and walruses, they can live in other environments besides ice. Penguins for example can be found in the Galapagos Islands.
2007-11-03 18:16:47
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answer #3
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answered by w2 6
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I think your logs would sink. A world covered in water would make massive tidal waves, because the moon would still create the tides, but the continents wouldn't be able to stop them. The logs would become waterlogged. There's no mention of cold weather until Genesis 8, which is after the flood, so there may not have been any icebergs before that. If you could think that quickly, and there were icebergs, maybe it could work, but I still think the waves would get you. Or the boulders being carried by the flood water. Or the mudslides. You wouldn't survive off of Noah's Ark.
2007-11-03 16:12:29
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answer #4
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answered by fuzz 4
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Aha! But a polar bear could climb up onto your berg, and he'd try to eat you or push you into the water. You might not be lucky enough to hitch a ride on a HUGE iceberg. Then, what if you saw a really nice looking eskimo of the opposite sex flying by you on another ice berg and you couldn't get over there? Wouldn't it just be better to hole up with a bunch of animals in a big wooden boat?
Edit: About those troublesome polar bears, walruses, penguins and sealions, etc. Isn't it obvious that God was cruising around in a little submarine zapping these creatures into existance, as he liked? Probably he did it just to give us something to think about.
(How can anyone read or answer this question seriously? Hmmm.)
2007-11-03 16:12:50
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answer #5
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answered by Zelda Hunter 7
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And while it's raining night and day for a month and a half straight, so much so that the mountains are covered, I'm sure that litle igloo on an iceberg would do you a whole lot of good. Great idea there.
There have been meteorological models made and studied that show that the time of the flood would have been a time of the worst worldwide weather catastrophes ever known...yep, that lil' igloo would have come in really handy.
2007-11-03 16:12:39
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answer #6
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answered by hsmomlovinit 7
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Hmm - there is precedent. In 1872 - 73, the surviving members of Charles Francis Hall's Arctic expedition are said to have survived for several months on a drifting ice floe, before being picked up by a whaling ship.
Of course, that they lived though this was entirely due to the presence of Inuit guides who understood Arctic survival and who were able to hunt for the group.
2007-11-03 16:23:16
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answer #7
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answered by irish1 6
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it is merely the end of the iceberg. the tale merely would not carry water. yet you could communicate up a typhoon about those arguments and also you're nonetheless swimming adversarial to the tide with those believers. in spite of the actuality that floats their boat, i wager.
2016-10-23 08:48:19
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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Good question, I suppose the same reason the Australian aboriginal people can trace their ancestry on the island to 40,000 years ago give or take. Because a massive flood has not covered the earth in recent times.
2007-11-04 02:34:43
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Yeah your right. Who has ever heard of waves eroding dirt, rocks away? Oh wait it happens all the time. Rivers are a good example of it. The Grand Canyon is a great example of it. Waves could easily break down ice. But you have your beliefs as we have ours. Peace
2007-11-03 16:25:20
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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