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Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:24 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:46 pm
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Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2009 8:49 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 1:24 am
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 1:27 am
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 2:03 am
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 8:57 am
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 11:17 am
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High-functioning Businesswoman
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 2:41 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 4:39 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:01 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:11 pm
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:56 pm
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ryuu_chan Could be fun if it were. I very much doubt that it's so. If there is or was life on Mars, they probably have their own story. My personal opinion is that Eden was in the middle of aforementioned four rivers... in Pangea. You know, that blob that was once one huge land mass then broke apart? When the contents started to form into... well, continents, the Garden was broken as well. Otherwise, I image we'd still see an angel with a flaming sword hanging around, and it'd be rather easy to pinpoint. mrgreen
If I may interject with some of my fundamentalist thoughts.
I believe that the continents are still connected below the oceans. There's dirt under there, so I'd be more likely to suggest that it was the flood of Noah (I take the flood story literally) that destroyed the Garden of Eden (or flooded it and it remains underwater) and gave us our oceans and left the continents similar to where they are now.
I doubt the current river Euphrates is the same one mentioned in the early chapters of Genesis because after the flood, the people left over to repopulate the world could've easily renamed things that look similar to places they've been before; like the English and French did when they came to the Americas, with places like New York and my home province, Nova Scotia (New Scotland in Latin) which reminded the colonials of York and Scotland.
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Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:10 pm
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Spike Zantren ryuu_chan Could be fun if it were. I very much doubt that it's so. If there is or was life on Mars, they probably have their own story. My personal opinion is that Eden was in the middle of aforementioned four rivers... in Pangea. You know, that blob that was once one huge land mass then broke apart? When the contents started to form into... well, continents, the Garden was broken as well. Otherwise, I image we'd still see an angel with a flaming sword hanging around, and it'd be rather easy to pinpoint. mrgreen If I may interject with some of my fundamentalist thoughts. I believe that the continents are still connected below the oceans. There's dirt under there, so I'd be more likely to suggest that it was the flood of Noah (I take the flood story literally) that destroyed the Garden of Eden (or flooded it and it remains underwater) and gave us our oceans and left the continents similar to where they are now.
If you were not anti-science, you would know, rather than believe, the continents are connected through solid earth.
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Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2009 12:16 am
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Spike Zantren ryuu_chan Could be fun if it were. I very much doubt that it's so. If there is or was life on Mars, they probably have their own story. My personal opinion is that Eden was in the middle of aforementioned four rivers... in Pangea. You know, that blob that was once one huge land mass then broke apart? When the contents started to form into... well, continents, the Garden was broken as well. Otherwise, I image we'd still see an angel with a flaming sword hanging around, and it'd be rather easy to pinpoint. mrgreen ...the people left over to repopulate the world could've easily renamed things that look similar to places they've been before; like the English and French did when they came to the Americas, with places like New York and my home province, Nova Scotia (New Scotland in Latin) which reminded the colonials of York and Scotland. THREAD STOP
Just a quick correction: before becoming New York, the settlement was established as New Amsterdam, was then captured by the English temporarily and then recaptured by the Dutch to be called New Orange. It was eventually ceded to the British permanently by treaty and called New York.
THREAD GO
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