Sujet : Re: One-pot dish
De : ft.tryon (at) *nospam* park.invalid (Coogan's Bluff)
Groupes : rec.food.cooking aus.politicsDate : 21. Nov 2024, 21:32:23
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <vho5cm$u03u$1@solani.org>
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Graham wrote:
On 2024-11-21 12:11 p.m., Coogan's Bluff wrote:
Graham wrote:
On 2024-11-21 11:44 a.m., Coogan's Bluff wrote:
Bruce wrote:
All these animals on one boat must have been carnage.
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Learn:
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https://youtu.be/PeNOURXWCmM
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Squit, twaddle and bunkum!
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Design, accomplishment, and success.
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A monument built by idiots to entertain idiots.
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A closed mind like yours is never open to consideration, that must suck.
I have a open mind
No, for example you have raging TDS ( denialist malady) and it's not even your own nation you obsess on.
That is evidence of a pre-judgment mania of sorts.
but not so open that my brains have fallen out as
they clearly have in your case.
Yer gonna hate this:
https://uncanceled.news/scientists-have-deciphered-the-worlds-oldest-map-and-it-reveals-the-location-of-noahs-ark/Scientists have recently unlocked the secrets of the world’s oldest map, a 3,000-year-old clay tablet known as the Imago Mundi, which is believed to show the location of Noah’s Ark. The ancient Babylonian artifact, etched with cuneiform—a script using wedge-shaped symbols—has puzzled archaeologists for centuries. Discovered in what is now Iraq in 1882, the tablet is housed at the British Museum, where it has become one of its famous collections.
The Imago Mundi depicts a circular world map, illustrating early Babylonian ideas about the world’s creation. The map is thought to show the entire known world at the time, with Mesopotamia at the bottom center.
This ancient Babylonian artifact deeply puzzled researchers for many years.
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But now the code has been cracked, and the reverse side of the artifact contains incredibly stunning information…
On the reverse side of the artifact, passages reportedly provide a guide describing what a traveler would encounter on their journey, including a path to “Urartu” and specific instructions on how to get there. One passage says: “To the fourth, to which you must travel seven leagues.” Another passage reportedly instructs those on the journey to go through “seven leagues to see something that is thick as a parsiktu-vessel.”
The term “parsiktu” appears on other ancient Babylonian tablets, referencing the scale of a vessel meant to withstand the legendary Great Flood. Researchers believe that Urartu, also known as Ararat, is linked to an ancient Mesopotamian poem recounting a family who, like Noah, landed their ark to preserve life following the 150-day flood. As the flooding ended, they were safely stationed at one of the peaks of Urartu, which aligns with “Ararat,” the Hebrew term for the mountain where Noah’s Ark is said to have come to rest after the flood.
I was floored when I first saw this.
According to Dr. Finkel, there is no doubt that Ararat “is the Hebrew equivalent of the Assyrian ‘Urartu’”…
“The first place you come to is called ‘Urartu’, it’s drawn on the map. Now, the interesting thing about that is that in the Bible Noah, in his Ark, landed on a mountain where the name is ‘Ararat’ and ‘Ararat’ is the Hebrew equivalent of the Assyrian ‘Urartu’. That’s quite a meaty thing, quite an interesting thing to think about because it shows that the story was the same, and of course that one led to the other but also, that from the Babylonian point of view, this was a matter of fact thing,” said Finkel.
He added, “If you did go on this journey, you would see the remnants of this historic boat which saved all the life of the world for the long-term future.”
This is one of the biggest archaeological bombshells in history, and the British Museum has released a video in which Dr. Finkel shares more details about this remarkable discovery.