Hans_lune Wrote:
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> A few obvious questions come to mind. The first of
> course is that not such flood occurred. If it had
> it would have left remarkable geological evidence
> that it had and would have killed most if not all
> land based and fresh water creatures - however
> there is no such sign of this happening.
The Younger Dryas Event happens every dozen millennia, and does indeed leave remarkable geological evidence, e.g. strata. It also kills most land based creatures, and generally erases the surface of The Earth (also causing major upheaval in the oceans). However, a small fraction has always remained to recolonise.
>
> The existing Nile Valley cultures don't
> disappeared instead they continued without any
> interference from this event. Can you explain how
> the Sebilian and Qadan cultures show no sign of
> being destroyed or even damaged during this even?
> Likewise for all the other cultures world wide?
The Younger Dryas event happened circa 10,000BC. Dating of cultures this far back is pretty unreliable, let alone antediluvian structures such as the Great Pyramid.
If traces of the culture are buried beneath many metres of rubble (diluvium), then they are most likely antediluvian. If just a few metres of sand, then probably not.
> One has to ask why couldn't they place the coffer
> there during the construction - as was probably
> done in many other pyramids?
To place it there would defeat the entire purpose.
The coffer was placed just outside with 2 outcomes:
1) If still there (or destroyed) - the cataclysm didn't happen.
2) If in the chamber - the cataclysm happened.
The engineers were pretty confident we'd be intelligent enough to deduce where the coffer was originally installed. ;-)