Please read the article carefully and see if, like any good True Christian™, you cannot see the following:
(i) 4,500 BC is too long, the maximum is 4,000 BC when the world was made. This is a ~10% error (quite acceptable to scientists but not to us.)
(ii) Mr Evans said: ''I think it was a doodle. I don't think it has any deep and meaningful religious significance.” Well, Duh! What scientist is going to say, “Yep, that’s proof of God!”? It is more than his tenure is worth! They have to keep up the pretence of atheism at all costs!
(iii) The Scientists say, “we do not know for sure.” That is just the same thing that they say when they talk of a “Big Bang”. This “in science speak” means “we are certain” You know this is the case when they admit
(iv) “''There are Megalithic tombs with concentric circles like this carved into stones” Hello! Obviously, if it was on a tomb, the only reason it would be there is to praise God for His Creation.
Thus we have it, probably carved by Adam’s great grandson or something and it is, in actual fact, the original Chapter 1 of Genesis describing the Creation, when they wrote in pictures, that are worth 1,000 words.
Anyhoo – Read on!
World's oldest doodle found on rock
Scientists have discovered what is believed to be one of the world's oldest doodles - an ancient scrawl carved onto a rock by a caveman 4,500 years ago.
Cambridge University experts believe the crudely etched circles are the Neolithic version of a modern office worker's scribbles on a post-it note.
The 6.6in (17cm) chunk of sandstone was discovered by an amateur archaeologist from the bottom of a deep quarry in Over, Cambs., during a university fun day.
Christopher Evans, director of the university's Archaeological Unit, thinks the concentric circles were created by one of our early ancestors ''killing time'' as opposed to a work of art.
Mr Evans said: ''I think it was a doodle. I don't think it has any deep and meaningful religious significance.”
''In this era of the Neolithic period they had a lot of time on their hands. It could show they were quite bored at times, but we don't know for sure. […]''There are Megalithic tombs with concentric circles like this carved into stones” -
Cambridge University experts believe the crudely etched circles are the Neolithic version of a modern office worker's scribbles on a post-it note.
The 6.6in (17cm) chunk of sandstone was discovered by an amateur archaeologist from the bottom of a deep quarry in Over, Cambs., during a university fun day.
Christopher Evans, director of the university's Archaeological Unit, thinks the concentric circles were created by one of our early ancestors ''killing time'' as opposed to a work of art.
Mr Evans said: ''I think it was a doodle. I don't think it has any deep and meaningful religious significance.”
''In this era of the Neolithic period they had a lot of time on their hands. It could show they were quite bored at times, but we don't know for sure. […]''There are Megalithic tombs with concentric circles like this carved into stones” -
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