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That's because other cultures and religions took the original stories of the Old Testament and twisted them to fit their own perspectives.Wirelessly posted
Look at the Near East, every cultures inherited a similar account, regardless of religions. The man, Noah, has different names, different statuses, different survival technique in each of the retellings. Look at the Gigamesh as a starting point. Many accounts in the Old Testament often have similar versions in other nearby cultures in the Middle East.
A worldwide flood would have wiped out all the people of Central Asia, South Asia, and the Far East, the same as it did the rest of the world. As the world repopulated, starting from the Middle East area, the people spread out in all directions. Those who moved further away probably didn't all maintain as much of the oral history. That doesn't mean the Flood didn't happen. It just means they didn't preserve remembrance of it.But these accounts didn't exist in Central Asia, South Asia or in the Far East. This alone tells us whatever happened at the time of Noah's Ark was a regional flooding occurring in Sumer region. You don't even need science to deduce the event probably took place on a flood plains in Mesopotamia.
Any flood, to the people who experience it, is "local." When it's your home and village that is disappearing under water, you don't worry about what's happening in other countries at that time.
It would take someone with God's perspective at that time to know that the Flood was worldwide.


Let's see ... Sphinx is commonly thought to have been built in c. 2558–2532 BC (and more modern carbon dating methods suggest it was built even before that, by several thousands of years).