rusra02 said:
Your post contains unsupport assertions and suppositions. What geological evidence is there to refute that the waters in the oceans came from the global deluge? How do you know the depth of pre-flood oceans? Certainly pre-flood oceans can have both shallow and deep areas, as the oceans of today do. The existence of deep-sea life in all it's beauty and complexity argues for an intelligent maker, not that the global deluge is anything other than historical truth.
If the flood happened around sometimes the 2nd half of 3rd millennium BCE (c. 2400-2100 BCE), then there should be geological evidences. Most creationists favored the dating of 2340 BCE.
Not only that the Persian Gulf used to further inland than it is today, so the Sumerian cities of ancient Ur, Eridu and Lagash used to be closer to the sure of the gulf; in fact, Ur used to be a coastal city-state. The city of Ur has been around since early Sumerian period (c. 3000 BCE) but archaeological evidences showed centuries of human occupations in the area (as Neolithic villages), prior to 3000 BCE. And flourished by 2600 BCE, roughly around the same time of historical Gilgamesh supposed to rule in Uruk.
Had the flood occurred as the bible say around that time, then these city-states would have been wiped out and washed away. No such evidences of such flood of that magnitude hit any of the 3 cities, archaeologically or geologically.
Also the Euphrates and Tigris used to both drained out into the Persian Gulf, SEPARATELY. In fact, the Persian Gulf, if anything has been receding back, instead of covering these cities, which what should have done had the flood occurred. Instead centuries after centuries, the Persian Gulf recede further and further back. By the time of Hammurabi, the 1st great king of Babylon, living in the 18th century BCE, Ur was no longer a coastal city; they were miles away from the shore at that time.
By the time of Alexander the Great, the Tigris have already been joined to the Euphrates river.
The point I'm making is that Ur has been a coastal city-state centuries before, during and after the supposed Flood, and being a low-land city, it should not and could not have existed had the Flood happened, and there would not have been a 3rd dynasty of Ur in the last quarter of the 3rd millennium BCE, if what you're saying is true.
The Indian Ocean do affect the Persian Gulf, and it has been showed that the Gulf has been receding gradually in the late 3rd millennium BCE. It did not experience sudden increase in sea level, otherwise it would show geologically and archaeology of such destruction.