World History After Noah–Part II

World History After Noah – Part II

 

Conditions for travel by both people and animals were affected by a one time Ice Age, which occurred after the Flood as the results of two unrepeatable conditions. (1) The oceans contained warm water because of widespread exposure to magma, volcanic eruptions, and recently released hot subterranean water. The warm waters easily evaporated and formed clouds, producing massive amounts of snow during the winter months and frequent rains during the summer months.

 

(2) The summer months were often cooler than usual, because large amounts of volcanic ash in the air from widespread volcanic eruptions blocked the sun’s rays. The cooler temperatures of summer only allowed a partial melting of each year’s winter snows, so ice packs began to build up on the land. The persistence of warm oceans and cool summer temperatures resulted in more and more ice accumulations outside the temperate regions.

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World History After Noah

World History After Noah – Part I

 

The human survivors of the Flood emerged to find dry ground after more than a year of living in the Ark. There was no trace of the former pre-Flood civilizations. All that remained of most plants and animals were now found as trillions of fossils embedded in layers of rocks and as some new plant growth from germinating seeds, spores, and adventitious growths.

 

Wild animals and birds on the Ark were released to return to the natural environment and reproduce. Domesticated plants and animals were tended on farms.

 

The human survivors began to repopulate the world as children were born into large families. Within a few generations, there were several thousand people on the earth.

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