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Документ Controversy over the great flood hypotheses in the Black Sea in light of geological, paleontological, and archaeological evidence(2007) Yanko-Hombach, Valentyna V.; Gilbert, Allan S.; Dolukhanov, Pavel M.; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктовна; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктівна; Гілберт, Аллан. С.; Гилберт, Аллан. С.; Долуханов, Павел Маркович; Долуханов, Павло МарковичLegends describing a Great Flood are found in the narratives of several world religions, and the biblical account of Noah’s Flood is the surviving heir to several versions of the ancient Mesopotamian Flood Myth. Recently, the story of the biblical deluge was connected to the Black Sea, together with the suggestion that the story’s pre-Mesopotamian origins might be found in the Pontic basin [Ryan, W.B.F., Pitman, III, W.C., 1998. Noah’s Flood: The New Scientific Discoveries About the Event That Changed History. Simon and Schuster, New York]. Based on the significance of this flood epic in the Judeo-Christian tradition, popular interest surged following publication of the idea.Документ PART I. IGCP 521 - INQUA 501 REPORT (2005-2009)(S.n., 2010) Yanko-Hombach, Valentyna V.; Yilmaz, Y.; Dolukhanov, Pavel M.; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктовна; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктівна; Долуханов, Павел Маркович; Долуханов, Павло МарковичSummary of major past achievements of the project.Over the past 30 ky, the "Black Sea-Mediterranean Corridor" ("Corridor") (Annex 1) underwent a complicated history, which remains hotly debated. Although thirty years have passed after the first IGCP coastal project of this region, there was subsequent study of the 30 ky timespan and evolution of the "Corridor" as a single entity despite the vast amount of geological and archaeological data that have been collected. These data remained a pile of individual pieces of a large puzzle awaiting to be assembled by joint efforts of the global sea-level community.Документ The Black Sea Flood Question: Changes in Coastline, Climate, and Human Settlement(2007) Yanko-Hombach, Valentyna V.; Gilbert, Allan S.; Panin, Nicolae; Dolukhanov, Pavel M.; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктовна; Янко-Хомбах, Валентина Венедиктівна; Панин, Николае; Панін, Ніколае; Гілберт, Аллан. С.; Гилберт, Аллан. С.; Долуханов, Павел Маркович; Долуханов, Павло МарковичA lengthy book does not need a lengthy preface, so these opening words will convey only some essential matters, including the circumstances that led to the present publication, some of the background to the research it contains, and thanks to those who helped in the effort.to those who helped in the effort. The Black Sea is one of the largest marginal seas: as deep as 2250 m and over 420,000 km2 in area. Its coastline visits seven nations and links Europe with Southwestern Asia, while its water is the product of Eurasian rivers and rainfall mixing with immigrant Mediterranean saline flowing in through the Bosphorus. Due to its semi-isolation from the world ocean, the Black Sea tends to amplify environmental changes, and thus its detailed and sensitive paleoclimatic record has become a focus of oceanographic research. It is also the world’s largest anoxic basin, enabling sophisticated studies of marine oxygen depletion and the exploration of ancient shipwrecks preserved in near pristine condition.