Many people are under the illusion that environmental disasters and climate change were a byproduct of the Industrial Revolution and the resulting emissions that led to global warming and the extent of the ozone hole.
But archaeological records and geological and morphological studies have shown that natural disasters are an inherent feature of life on our planet ever since its inception about 4.5 billion years ago.
Environmental changes were responsible for the extinction and emergence of many a civilisation, culture, kingdom, and city, but also animal and plant species and genera.
The greatest flood in human history happened in the Arabian Gulf
But the postglacial flooding of the Arabian Gulf stands out as the event that most impacted the history of human civilisation.
A few years ago, archaeological studies and geological excavations began to unveil the mysteries of this great flood.
The event was recounted in the legends of the Sumerians and Babylonians, and then in the holy books, which gives these legends a historical dimension associated with major climatic changes that occurred in the region as a result of the decline of the last ice age (110,000 years to 10,000 years ago).
Reinforcing this connection between the Sumerian flood myth and the recent discoveries on the coasts and at the bottom of the Arabian Gulf is the astonishing correspondence of that legend with the lost paradise of Dilmun, which was called the “land of salvation”.