WHAT'S HOT
Prev | Current Page 53 | Next

Huxley, Thomas Henry, 1825-1895

"Hasisadra's Adventure"


(3) See Cernik's maps in Petermanns Mittheilungen,
Erganzungashefte 44 and 45, 1875-76.
(4) I have not cited the dimensions given to the ships in most
translations of the story, because there appears to be a doubt
about them. Haupt (Keilinschriftliche Sindfluth-Bericht,
p. 13) says that the figures are illegible.
(5) It is probable that a slow movement of elevation of the land
at one time contributed to the result--perhaps does so still.
(6) At a comparatively recent period, the littoral margin of the
Persian Gulf extended certainly 250 miles farther to the
northwest than the present embouchure of the Shatt-el Arab.
(Loftus, Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society,
1853, p. 251.) The actual extent of the marine deposit inland
cannot be defined, as it is covered by later
fluviatile deposits.
(7) Tiele (Babylonisch-Assyrische Geschicthe, pp. 572-3)
has some very just remarks on this aspect of the epos.
(8) In the second volume of the History of the Euphrates,
p. 637 Col. Chesney gives a very interesting account of the
simple and rapid manner in which the people about Tekrit and in
the marshes of Lemlum construct large barges, and make them
water-tight with bitumen. Doubtless the practice is extremely
ancient and as Colonel Chesney suggests, may possibly have
furnished the conception of Noah's ark.


Pages:
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54