Evidence for the flood
http://www.earthage.org/EarthOldorYoung/scientific_evidence_for_a_worldwide_flood.htm
I'm not going to post the whole article here. Have a look and decide for yourself.
I have to ask why are we so hell bent on proving our point? Perhaps it's because those who believe see it as a pivotal moment in human history rather than just another disaster.
The scriptures make many references to the flood, it's not all Genesis.
You all saw what happened at Fukushima - the tsunami destroyed everything in its wake. How much more so with a flood. What evidence would you expect to find. Undwerwater cities?
http://www.squidoo.com/ancientcivilizations
Underwater Structures Show Strong Evidence Of A Past Civilization On A Global Scale
The strangest of all underwater finds concerns the monuments of Yonaguni Jima discovered off the coast of Japan(pic on left is called "the turtle")...which were hotly debated at one time but more and more evidence has been accumulating suggesting that the structures are actually man made(cut right into the bedrock like many other structures found).
Most alternative archeological researchers seem to believe that there was a technologically advanced civilization who built their structures in stone that existed at the end of the last ice age, when the sea levels were over a hundred feet lower than today. Since the biggest cities are always built on the coast, the place to look for ancient cities would be the levels at which the ocean used to be at before all the ice melted(approx 9500 BC).
However, even without taking such extreme dating ideas seriously we can see that there are definitely underwater ruins strewn all over the planet. Since the ocean levels are thought to have gone up and done with mini ice ages, it may be that we had civilization earlier than we thought%u2026just not as early as some like to believe.
http://www.morien-institute.org/imk4.html
The controversy that has erupted in archæological circles around the world since the discovery of an enigmatic
structure, described by some as 'pyramid-like', at Iseki Point, just off the coast of the southernmost
Japanese island of Yonaguni-Jima, some 15 years ago, looks set to get even hotter as news
emerges that the so-called 'Yonaguni Monument' is just one of a number of
underwater megalithic structures in a 'complex' stretching for
many hundreds of miles northeast of Taiwan.