With Sarah Palin’s deep interest and advocacy for offshore drilling, with the seafloor exploration involved, and with her interest in intelligent design creationism, where it’s hypothesized that the end of the Ice Age sea level rise submerged many ancient seashore port cities, it seems plausible that initiatives could induce undersea exploration for these ruins, for instance, about 50 miles east of Miami, off north Bimini Island, are submerged ruins of a temple, with marble columns and gables, and the nearby famed Bimini “Road,” which probably was a breakwater or protective wall during ice age times, when the seal level was a few hundred feet lower.
These ruins have been known and photographed for sometime, but a full exploration of them, well funded, down to greater depths too, would open up a whole new world of scientific exploration, nautical archaeology, which obviously would be very interesting for students to talk about, as they consider the multitudinous submerged ruin sites documented across the Atlantic, off southern Spain, Gibraltar, and Morocco, off Malta, Greece, Libya, and Egypt, and off Lebanon and Turkey, and in the Black Sea, as well as, off northwest India and southern India, the Ryukyu Islands of Japan, and off several islands of the Pacific, such as Pohnpei and Lelu.
One of the problems with the dogmatic darwinistic view of world history taught in our public school classrooms is that the many submerged ruins documented worldwide are not even considered by the public school educators, as if they don’t exist, so the kids are harmed by this ignorance, being shielded from a whole new field of academic inquiry, nautical archaeology; not looking just for shipwrecks, but documenting and exploring in depth the already confirmed submerged ruins’ sites in many parts of the world, some of which could be at the mouth of the ice age Mississippi River, and off Yucatan, as I have read reports of some there.
The mainstream academics in our public school systems are hamstrung by their darwinian timeline, which dicates that the Ice Age ended around 10000 B. C., much too early for those often sophisticated megalithic structures to have been built, so they are forced to ignore them, to the detriment of the students, but with Sarah Palin’s suggestion that the alternative intelligent design creation science model be considered in the classroom, these ruins would be presented as evidence that the Ice Age ended actually much later than the darwinists say, and then let the kids decide, for comparative analysis of the models. Obvioulsy, the mainstreamers don’t want this, because their darwinian model does not hold up under scrutiny, but that is intellectual honesty, that which we seek to instill in our students.
The author is a young earth creationist, who is commenting on how mainstream scientists and New Agers are missing the boat (willfully in many cases) as they interpret the evidences about our ancient history.
Nautical Archaeology Underwater Ruins Creation Science Sarah Palin Could Dovetail with Offshore Domestic Oil Exploration Production Wildcat Champion Sarah Barracuda Palin Supports Studies of Intelligent Design Creation Science in Public School Classrooms to Debate and Compare Origins Models
With Sarah Palin’s deep interest and advocacy for offshore drilling, with the seafloor exploration involved, and with her interest in intelligent design creationism, where it’s hypothesized that the end of the Ice Age sea level rise submerged many ancient seashore port cities, it seems plausible that initiatives could induce undersea exploration for these ruins, for instance, about 50 miles east of Miami, off north Bimini Island, are submerged ruins of a temple, with marble columns and gables, and the nearby famed Bimini “Road,” which probably was a breakwater or protective wall during ice age times, when the seal level was a few hundred feet lower.
These ruins have been known and photographed for sometime, but a full exploration of them, well funded, down to greater depths too, would open up a whole new world of scientific exploration, nautical archaeology, which obviously would be very interesting for students to talk about, as they consider the multitudinous submerged ruin sites documented across the Atlantic, off southern Spain, Gibraltar, and Morocco, off Malta, Greece, Libya, and Egypt, and off Lebanon and Turkey, and in the Black Sea, as well as, off northwest India and southern India, the Ryukyu Islands of Japan, and off several islands of the Pacific, such as Pohnpei and Lelu.
One of the problems with the dogmatic darwinistic view of world history taught in our public school classrooms is that the many submerged ruins documented worldwide are not even considered by the public school educators, as if they don’t exist, so the kids are harmed by this ignorance, being shielded from a whole new field of academic inquiry, nautical archaeology; not looking just for shipwrecks, but documenting and exploring in depth the already confirmed submerged ruins’ sites in many parts of the world, some of which could be at the mouth of the ice age Mississippi River, and off Yucatan, as I have read reports of some there.
The mainstream academics in our public school systems are hamstrung by their darwinian timeline, which dicates that the Ice Age ended around 10000 B. C., much too early for those often sophisticated megalithic structures to have been built, so they are forced to ignore them, to the detriment of the students, but with Sarah Palin’s suggestion that the alternative intelligent design creation science model be considered in the classroom, these ruins would be presented as evidence that the Ice Age ended actually much later than the darwinists say, and then let the kids decide, for comparative analysis of the models. Obvioulsy, the mainstreamers don’t want this, because their darwinian model does not hold up under scrutiny, but that is intellectual honesty, that which we seek to instill in our students.
This entry was posted on Sunday, September 7th, 2008 at 12:42 pm and is filed under General Information, News Commentary, Submerged Ancient Ruins. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.