Overview
- Recent articles highlight 1930s digs at Tell Fara that recorded a thick clay and sand layer beneath later settlements, described as evidence of major flooding.
- Coverage quotes independent researcher Matt LaCroix, who links similar deposits at Ur, Kish, Harappa, and early Nile sites to a single prehistoric cataclysm.
- LaCroix estimates the event at about 20,000 years ago by correlating ice cores, tree rings, volcanic debris, geomagnetic excursions, and global flood myths rather than direct archaeological dating.
- Reports say artifacts beneath the Tell Fara deposits, including proto-cuneiform tablets, polychrome jars, and Fara II–style bowls, suggest a more complex culture before the flood layers formed.
- Critics point to the Younger Dryas as a regional phenomenon and to Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherer lifeways, rejecting claims of a worldwide flood that erased advanced civilizations.