This undated photo released by Mexico's National Anthropology and History Institute shows divers from the Great Mayan Aquifer project (L) exploring the Sac Actun underwater cave system, where Mayan and Pleistocene bones and cultural artifacts have been found submerged, near Tulum, Mexico. (AP Photo) https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/ancient-human-remains-ice-age-animal-bones-found-in-giant-mexican-cave/story-RVrSjUorkMFPPuLS5stTlO.html
A diver from the Great Mayan Aquifer project looking at human remains believed to be from the Pleistocene era, in the Sac Actun underwater cave system, near Tulum, Mexico. (AP Photo)PinGGG!.....................
I’m not going to try to put a square peg in a round hole, but scientists come across stuff from roughly 9000 years ago (give or take a few thousand) and they see extinct animals in a Flooded cave and ... there is just no chance in Hell that they will say, “Evidence of the Great Flood? It’s one thing we’re looking at ...”
No. No they aren’t saying that. They would never say that. Because the first premise of modern science is “There is no God”.
New evidence? Why would new evidence make a scientist re-think his premises? [/s]
Interesting that they had all these large mammals in southern Mexico but not so much by the time the Spanish got there. There were deer in a few places and sheep in some, but for the most part, meat was hard to come by. It is postulated that a reason for all the sacrifices at the Aztec temples was for meat—the meat went straight to the people of the city to keep them happy. Kind of like a Mexican version of bread and circuses. The people of Mexico are generally very small and their bodies are made for low caloric intake, which is why they tend to get large in a modern diet.
Anyway, too bad for them that giant sloths and elephants didn’t survive the end of the ice age.
Ping.