Stuff You Should Know - Why Do Great Flood Myths Seem To Be Universal?
Episode Date: December 7, 2021If look into the mythology of just about any culture in the world, you will find a myth about a great flood that destroyed humanity and submerged the Earth in the distant past. Does this mean that a g...reat flood actually happened? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
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Good luck, good luck. Hey everybody, we are super excited to return to the sketchfest stage
and do a live show again. We missed it so, so much last year and we can't wait to get back
to San Francisco. Yeah, it's our first live show in two years, Chuck, and we're going to be there
at the Sydney Goldstein Theater in beautiful San Francisco, California at 7.30 on Friday,
January 21st. It is a straight up stuff you should know live show and it's going to be
off the chain. That's right. You should show up to see if we've forgotten how to do this.
To see us skate around on stage nervously. Sure. Doubting ourselves and eventually
bringing the funnies. Yeah, hopefully. Where do they go? They go to SF as in San Francisco,
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Don't be naughty. Be nice. So we'll see you guys on Friday, January 21st in San Francisco, California.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio.
Ahoy and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and we're the captains of this
here ship called Stuff You Should Know. And that's all there is to it. Although I do think we need
to allow for the fact that Jerry is rear admirable. And by that, of course, I mean rear admirable.
And by that, of course, I mean it's going to be a long episode.
Has there ever been a cutesy TV show called the admirable admiral?
No, that sounds great. I think there was one. The Simpsons did one called admiral baby.
Oh, all right. Well, that counts. Yeah. I don't know if the baby was particularly admirable,
though. It would have been like a terrible person. So I have a cold. So I just want to apologize
up front. Just a head cold, but I'm a little stuffy. So I'm sorry if it's coming across as
untoward. I'm very proud of you for pushing through Chuck because lesser podcasters would not.
They might just be like, I can't. I have a cold and people don't want to hear that.
And you say to heck with that, I'm going forward with it.
Remember back in the day, you had like a three-month cold that one year?
Every year. Every year for a little while.
I used to get so sick. Yeah, I know it was terrible, but we've gotten much better, haven't we?
Yeah, I think, I don't know, maybe quitting smoking had something to do with that.
Maybe. Just a touch.
You don't get colds like that anymore.
No, I really don't. So yet another reason to quit smoking,
everybody who's out there on the fence. That's right.
So we're talking today. The reason I said that we're captains is because I was making a play
on a story that it seems like every single person Chuck knows about. At the very least,
I can say with almost 100% confidence that everyone that you and I have ever met, seen,
and passing, talked to, or been in the same like country with probably, has heard of the story
of Noah and the Flood, where Noah was told to go ahead and build a boat because the earth was
going to flood and everybody was going to be killed. And by the way, grab some animals,
put them on board so that you and your wife and then the animals can all repopulate your
respective species once the flood subsides, right? It's a classic story. Everybody loves it.
We read it out loud just about every Saturday at dinnertime. And it's just a great story,
right? Everybody knows this story. But it turns out, Chuck, that there's this idea that actually
happened. And it's long been an idea that what the Noah story is talking about happened in
actuality, that there was a point in time where the entire world flooded. And there's been a lot
of scholarly research into this, into how that's even possible. Yeah. And I guess if we're talking
about this particular, because, you know, we've found after digging around and getting Ed to help
us with this research that there are flood myths in not every culture, but a lot of cultures over
the years. And we'll get into that, you know, in lots of detail. But as far as actual Noah's
actual flood from the Old Testament, there was a gentleman in 1872 named George Smith, who was a
hobbyist of all things Assyrian and an amateur sort of historical sleuth, but a well educated
one nonetheless, because he could do things like read cuneiform tablets. And he was doing that one
day on, I don't know if it was an actual lunch break, or if that's just apocryphal, but supposedly
on a lunch break, went to a museum was reading cuneiform and came across a story of the epic
of Gilgamesh and read this quote, build a boat, abandon wealth and seek survival, spurn poverty,
save life, take on board all living things, seed, animals, the boat you will build, her dimension
shall be equal, her length and breadth shall be the same. Doesn't sing about cubits, but it's inferred.
Right. Cover her with a roof, cover her with a roof like the ocean below, and he will send you
a rain of plenty. And George Smith said, hey, this is strikingly familiar as the Christian
slash Jewish Old Testament Noah's flood story, but this is several hundred years previous.
Yeah. And instead of God telling Noah or an angel telling Noah, it's the God in leal,
who's telling a guy named Utanapishtim to build this boat. Noah's nowhere to be heard.
And for what reason? What do you mean? Well, I mean, wasn't this one of the ones where like
earth is being punished basically? Oh, yeah. So the reason that that in leal gave to Utanapishtim
was because the humans were too noisy and the gods were sick of humans. So they were going to flood
the earth and kill off all humans. Whereas in the Bible, it was because humans had become too wicked
to live. I think noisy and wicked are the same thing back then. I guess so. And it makes you
wonder, like, did somebody misread the word and they're like, noisy. Okay. And just barreled on.
They're like, my lunch break is almost over. So George Smith just was like, noisy. They said
noisy. But there was also the idea of saving animals. And there was also the idea that afterward
birds were sent out to find dry land just as in no story. Right. And so you just kind of say,
whoops, because the Epic of Gilgamesh predates the Old Testament by at least several hundred
years, depending on what part you're talking about. And so you might say, okay, so the Noah's
story is adapted from this, but that doesn't mean that it undermines the veracity. They don't
undermine the veracity of one another. In fact, if you stop and think about it, the fact that
one of the first things that was ever written down after the invention of writing, Cuneiform,
was the first written system humans ever devised. And that the first literary work ever created,
the Epic of Gilgamesh, contained this flood story. It kind of suggests that
something actually may have happened. Like, it was a really important story that has stuck
around for thousands and thousands of years. The Epic of Gilgamesh was written 3,400 years ago.
It suggests that there might be some kernel of truth to it. Yeah. And over the years, a lot of
people have tried to prove whether scientifically or otherwise that the Noah's flood really did take
place. Bible literalists, is that what we call them? I think so. Okay. Bible literalists,
Bible historians, because that would go a long way in Christianity if you could say,
hey, the Bible is an actual historical document. This stuff is really true. And in the 18th and 19th
century, there was something called deluvialism, deluvial meaning like relating to a great flood.
But that was a big shaper of actual geology was basically saying, hey, this physical,
literally the physical world that we're living in came about after this flood,
what kind of reset things. And then the real geological record came along when science
got serious and they proved that was not the case. And that kind of went the way of the dodo
around the mid 1800s. Yeah, they kind of did it backwards. They said, the Noah flood shaped the
world as we see it, go find proof. And when they found proof, they were like, it's not really adding
up. Yeah. So there's no evidence that there was a global flood that inundated the world. And in
fact, the geological record that these geologists, the early ones and you know, up to modern day ones
have been putting together supports the exact opposite of that, that earth wasn't created in
a deluge. It was created over incredibly long distances of time, very, very slowly layer by
layer, right? That's right. But people still say, okay, well, why number one, why have we been telling
this flood story for so long? And then also, why is it like you said, the idea of flood myth seems
almost universal. Doesn't that like still strongly suggest that there was, even if the Bible isn't
quite have it, right? And by the way, Noah's story also shows up in the Quran too. So it's in the
Jewish Bible, the Old Testament and the Quran. And then there's the Epic of Gilgamesh story.
Like why is this important story still around? Doesn't it still support the idea that something
happened? Why would there be universal flood myths from cultures that had never even heard of
Christianity before? And there've been like some attempts to explain that that I think are much
more satisfying than the idea that we're just missing all of the evidence for a great worldwide
deluge that happened back in antiquity. Yeah. And there were, you know, it's more than just those.
There were Chinese flood myths. There were flood myths in Southern Canada and the British Isles.
So there was one study that picked out 50 cultures and they all had their own flood myths.
And that it was related to some kind of punishment. So they started looking, like you said, of like,
why, why is this happening? And there's a bunch of reasons and they all kind of make sense to me,
if I'm being honest. One of them is that there was a flood in these cultures, but
it wasn't a global flood. But if you're, you know, if all you know is a certain area and you never
get to leave that area and it wipes out everything you know, then the story that you pass along orally
through the years would sound like one that wiped out everything.
Yeah. And like the whole idea is that this flood actually did happen way far back to one
group. And then that group eventually kind of spread out and carried that flood myth with them.
And so to those of us today, historians, anthropologists looking at like all of these
groups that are spread out all over the world, all sharing basically the same story,
it would make it seem like a flood had impacted all of these groups that were that far spread
out. So it must have been a really big flood. But this explanation says, no, the flood was
actually really localized. It was the group that it happened to that eventually spread out.
That's one explanation. It makes a lot of sense. And one of the groups that are usually kind of
pinpointed as this flood happening to are the Proto-Indo-Europeans who were known to have
been around the, I think the Caucasus Mountains to start and then just spread out as far as the
British Isles, basically all over Europe, northwest, east, south, and that all of our languages
like English, Germanic, just a whole slew of languages developed out of this group.
Yeah. And some more support for this is the fact that there aren't flood myths in sub-Saharan
African cultures. And these were groups that when they left Africa, they didn't come back.
So they would not have taken back with them a flood myth from Proto-Indo-Europeans.
So it all kind of makes sense. Yeah, exactly. There's another kind of
related one too that says that there were floods, just not a flood. That flooding is
actually really common. So it happened to a lot of different groups. So it would make sense that
all these different cultures would have flood myths. Sure. And again, if you live in your
riverside village and you don't get to travel very far from there and everything you know of
gets destroyed, again, it could be Lin support to the idea that it gets translated as a worldwide
flood. And if everyone's having these localized floods, which happened, there's always been floods,
then not necessarily of the 40 days and 40 nights variety. But when things are passed around orally
and then they get rewritten, things get kind of mixed up. Yeah. And it's our bad, those of us alive
today, who are mistaking or laying our interpretation of the word world onto like these cultures
use of the word world. They're saying their world, which is much smaller than it is to those of us
today. When we think the world, we think the whole globe, you know? Yeah. And speaking of laying
your things on other cultures, the third one is Christian missionaries. And there's evidence of
this happening. They would go and tell the story of Noah's great flood, especially when colonization
was happening too. And between missionaries and colonization, all these other cultures picked
up on that original biblical flood tale, or I don't know if we should call it a flood myth or
flood tale at this point. What should we call it? I think most people call it flood myths or
diluvian myths. Okay. Diluvian myth. That sounds a little more academic. So yeah. So Christian
missionaries did this. And I think this is also evidence in the fact that the South Pacific
didn't really have one until 1814 when they came into contact with Christian missionaries.
And then all of a sudden they had the Maori flood myths. Yeah. So they actually had a flood myth
before, but apparently it was more tsunami-based. And then after contact with Christianity, it became
much more of like a deluge. And it just bore some striking resemblances to the Noah flood myth of
Christianity. And apparently that happened all over the South Pacific as well, where these cultures
will have their own kind of flood myth, but it's always based on tsunamis. But then the Christians
come and go and all of a sudden it's a deluge where the water rose after like, you know, 40 days
and 40 nights of rain and stuff. So that creates a lot of headaches for anthropologists, but it
also at the same time explains why a universal flood myth or a flood myth would seem universal to
those of us around today and why they seem to bear such a striking resemblance to one another,
you know? Indeed. I think we should take a break. And I'm going to go blow my nose. Okay. And then
we'll come back and talk about geomethology right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing
can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough, or you're at the end of the
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podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if
you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But
just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
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And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
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So Chuck, that was nice of you to blow your nose at the break rather than during
recording, even though I still had to hear it.
You know what's funny? I was listening to, I don't know why I just thought of this,
but I was listening to Paul F. Tompkins' Stay of Homekins podcast. He does with his wife,
Janie, today. And he was talking about sneezing on stage and that it happened to him once
in his career. And Paul is someone who spent lots and lots and lots of time on stages.
And I wonder if there's something to that of the body withholding things like sneezes,
because I've never seen anyone sneeze on stage. I've never sneezed on stage.
Isn't that weird? Yeah. I'm sure it's related to adrenaline and fight or flight.
That's what I was thinking. I mean, there's got to be something to that.
Yeah. Like your body's like, I have time to waste all that energy on sneezing. We've got
to get out of here. We've got to put on a great show.
It would be really weird to think about it if like, I don't know, Barry Manilow in Vegas was
talking about setting up Mandy before he sings it and just lets out a big sneeze.
Yeah. Well, thank you for setting me up to reminisce yet again about the time that you
me and I saw Barry Manilow front row center in Vegas.
You would have been sneezed on with that big snot.
Yes. We actually would have been covered in his sneeze.
All right. So we promised talk of geomethology. Here's the idea. Since science really got
attacked together, there have been a couple of different ways to look at things like flood myths
as either this is a story about our cultural values. There's a lot of religious metaphor
involved or this was an actual historical event. And geomethology came along to kind of say,
hey, man, it can kind of be both. Like there could have been a real flood and it also
took on metaphor and took on cultural values and was used as a story of, I can't think of
the word I'm trying to think of to teach you a lesson. What's it called? Fable? Yeah, like a fable.
So this kind of, this field has emerged since I believe the 60s. And actually it was, I was
reading about this field of geomethology is like still really trying to establish itself
in the field of geology. And most geomethologists are trained geologists. That's where you start out.
You play D&D? Probably. But they also are like, they have to really defend what they're doing
against their fellow geologists because they're basically saying all of these myths, all of
these legends, all of these folk traditions, they actually contain eyewitness accounts of
natural disasters, of weird events in earth, of early finds of fossils. And yeah, they've
encloaked them in the language of mythology and the terminology of mythology and monsters and
weirdness and all this stuff that makes it just seem completely legendary to us today. But that's
how these pre-scientific and often pre-literate cultures pass along really valuable information.
And like we've been kind of foolish to just discount them as nothing but legend as if
there's no fact whatsoever in there. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Exactly. And so that's what geomethology is doing. They're saying, wait a minute, wait a minute.
If you just look at this the right way, we're covered up in historical accounts just waiting
for us to unravel if we learn how to read these correctly and then also correlate
with actual like known geological events that we've discovered through science.
Yeah. Like, hey, you see that story that seems completely crazy about a demon god
who lives in a mountain and gets angry and spouts fire from its top. Like, that's a volcano,
bros. And like, just because it sounds crazy, doesn't mean we shouldn't look at the fact that
an actual volcano eruption might have happened then. And let's kind of marry these two things
and let's just all get along. Right. And so like that legend about the volcano with the angry god
that sometimes spews like scary stuff forth. And if you ever hear the mountain starting to
make rumbles, it means the god is waking up and you should run. Like that is a way for a culture
that is aware that this mountain is actually a volcano and that volcano can sit dormant for
generations at a stretch. So there will be people born in the future who aren't aware that that's
a volcano. And this is the way that the culture passes down over deep time this really important
information. If the volcano ever makes a sound, run because you don't want the fiery breath of
that god that's trapped inside. It makes perfect sense. Yeah, I love this stuff. Like before science
came along, all humans did from the moment they could sort of form thoughts was trying to explain
what was going on around them from rain and thunder to volcanoes and floods. And I don't know,
I think it's super interesting. It's almost like these proto early warning systems. Right.
Like nuclear. They didn't really know how to explain the science of it. Exactly. Like nuclear
semiotics. Remember we did an episode on that on how to tell people 10,000 years in the future
about steering clear of nuclear waste, right? It's the same exact principle. It's just chucked
somewhere along the way. We later generations became arrogant and just completely discounted
any of those pre-scientific traditions because they didn't appear scientific. But it is exactly
like what you were saying. It was the way that they made sense of actual stuff. And so there's
plenty of stuff to learn from those accounts and those tales and those myths and legends.
We just have to basically kind of eat a little bit of crow and go back and be like, well,
we've been ignoring this to our own detriment. Yeah. And it's like you said earlier, it's a tough
road to hoe though for scientists these days if they take this on because you have mixed results
when you go back and you look at these tales. Some of them may just be folk tales and legends.
And some may have kernels of truth. Some may have a little more truth. So there's a lot to sort of
parse through as a geologist these days if you're working as or with a geomithologist.
Right. And so when you are laying this out and trying to figure out, okay, what is this myth
describing? Again, you're a trained geologist if you're a geomithologist, but you're also working
with people from other scientific fields. As far as trying to uncover the fact, the kernel of
truth behind these flood myths, you would be working with paleo hydrology or paleobathymetry,
which is the study of ancient sea levels like where they were at in the past. And so you're
going to take like the findings from these fields and then say, okay, let me see if I can correlate
it with a myth or you find a myth and you say, okay, let me see if I can correlate it with
paleobathymetry or paleo hydrology findings. And they've actually turned up some really
interesting stuff so far. Yeah, there was in 2016, there was a study that tied together
one of the Chinese flood myths from about 4,000 years ago. Basically, there was a great flood
wiped out China. It lasted for a couple of decades. And then this great man came along
who had become Emperor Yu and tamed the water. So geologists went back and they said,
all right, there's an ancient landslide around that same time that dammed up a river
and a lake filled up behind it in about six months or so. And then that flooded,
that river got flooded, broke through the dam, and there was this huge flood. And they have found
sediment that sort of tracks along these lines. Then they found that Emperor Yu actually
it turns out he may not have been magically tamed the water. He just had a knack for early
engineering in that he dredged the waters and it cleared up the river's flow. Things returned
to normal and he became Emperor. But back then it gets told as a tale of this great soon-to-be
Emperor that tames the waters when he was just good at what he was doing. Right. But they,
I mean, they found like evidence, geological evidence that backs all of this up that this whole
series of events, the earthquake that triggered the landslide, the landslide, the dam, the lake
filling up in six months, the lake breaking and flooding, that all this happened within a single
year. That is definitely the kind of thing that your culture is going to make note of and pass
down over the years, that this kind of thing can happen. And then not only that, this great person
came along and freed us from the burden of these floodwaters that apparently stuck around for 20
years. That's right. It's pretty cool. There's another one that is just beyond thrilling, if you
ask me, that a lot of people say this is probably, this is possibly. And I think that's a big reason
a lot of mainstream geologists have problems with geomythology, is we can't really see a course
to getting to the point where we're saying, this is the one, this flood that we have evidence of
is what gave rise to the epic of Gilgamesh and Noah's story. But you can say there's a really
good chance that this is the one, this fits the bill. And this one does kind of stick out like
that. That's right. This one in the 90s, it became fairly popular that basically said that there was
an oceanographer named William Ryan and another guy named Walter Pittman. They were, I think,
in the early 2000s. And they said that rising sea levels at one point caused the Mediterranean
to burst through the Bosporus Strait about 7,000 years ago. And this was a legit, serious flood
that I'm sure seemed like a flood, like a global type of thing. It created a waterfall, a volume 200
times that of Niagara Falls. And I think enough water in one day that could have flooded Manhattan
by 3,000 feet. That's quite a bit. They also determined that the Mediterranean sea moved
inland, the coast moved inland by about a mile a day. Can you imagine seeing that happen before
your eyes? Like you're just, you almost lose your mind. Again, that would make a really great story
that you would pass along and explain it in whatever terms you could. But there would have been coastal
settlements along the Bosporus Strait on either side, on the Mediterranean side and also on the
Black Seaside that all this water poured into. And it would have just completely wiped those
settlements out. So the people who did survive would have been like something really bad happened
here. And this is how we're going to make sense of it. And the timing of it was just right. It
happened probably about 7,000 years ago. And as we'll see, there's a lot of stuff that happened
around 7,000, 7,500 years ago around the world because the end of that last glacial period started
in the sea levels rose and all sorts of crazy stuff happened as a result. But that's one that
people point to is like, that may be the flood that gave rise to the Gilgamesh and Noah stories.
No pun intended.
Gave rise.
I think so.
It really was unintended.
Yeah. Another one about 7,500 years ago was the creation of the Persian Gulf,
kind of a similar kind of thing during the last Ice Age. What is now the Persian Gulf used to
not be. It used to be a very nice river valley near the Fertile Crescent where people lived.
And the thing here though that I don't quite get is that they haven't found any evidence
of things underwater there, right?
No, they haven't. The reason why they think this happened, Chuck, is because all of a sudden on
the shores of the Gulf as we know it today, some like really well-established settlements with
decorative pottery and well-built stone houses and all sorts of other things,
domesticated animals just sprang up basically overnight.
So they were relocated essentially.
Yeah. That's really the only explanation. I went from hunting settlements,
hunting camps to all of a sudden these people are like an advanced society.
The best explanation is that their original settlement is down there beneath the Persian
Gulf. We just haven't found it yet.
What about Doggerland?
So Doggerland is another similar story. They both share what's called aquaterra, by the way,
which is a term that was coined in the 90s to describe these lands that were exposed for 150,000
years that humans were developing and forming societies and then were lost just 7,070,500
years ago when the sea levels rose again. So Doggerland and the idea of the Gulf being an
underwater now submerged settlement, Doggerland's like that, but instead of in the Persian Gulf,
it's been in the North Sea. It was a patch of land that connected the British Isles to Scandinavia
before until about 8,500 years ago. Right. And here they have actually found submerged traces
of settlements under the sea unlike the one in the Persian Gulf.
Right. And they actually think that it's possible. Some people are saying no, it's probably just
slow, steady sea level rise that flooded Doggerland. But there was a massive landslide
in I think Norway called the Storiga event that happened 8,500 years ago and probably generated
a massive tsunami. And it could have been big enough to have submerged Doggerland permanently
after that. Apparently that's how big that underwater landslide was.
Yeah. I was about to say underwater. We got to point that out.
Yeah. But there's a flood story from Brittany around that area that says that a king's
daughter was possessed by a demon and opened their country's floodgates and that was flooded
catastrophically. So it's like, are they talking about this event that happened 8,500 years ago
that survived as this legend until today? That's right. And yet another right here in the,
well, and now the US of A, but in the 1980s and 90s, they investigated flood myths of the Indigenous
peoples in the Pacific Northwest and they found out that their flood myths, this was a little
more recent. This was around 1700 A.D., but the idea is that there was a magnitude nine earthquake
that caused a tsunami unleashing these big waves from basically sort of Vancouver Island
all the way down to Northern California. Yeah. It was the Ho and the Quilyuk people who had this
legend of thunderbird and whale getting in a fight. And what's interesting is, I mean,
there's all sorts of geological evidence. Apparently, there's still trees that are just not
where they're just not growing back. They were wiped clean from the tsunami. But there's a
Japanese temple, a Buddhist temple that marked the date, January 6th, 1700, because a tsunami
wave made it all the way to Japan and they noted it. So by basically cross-correlating that Japanese
noting of the date with the Ho and the Quilyuk's story about thunderbird and whale, they've said,
this story is about this particular event, which is pretty awesome.
And then sometimes it's just a culture like pre-science again, making sense out of finding
weird things like the Zuni people in the Southwest of the United States. Obviously,
not back then, they saw these ancient marine animals and seashells and the fossils that they
were finding. And they said, well, this is part of our creation story. There was a great flood,
and that's how this stuff got here. Yeah, here in the desert, which is, I mean,
that's how a pre-scientific culture would make sense of that kind of thing. Pretty cool.
Absolutely. So I say we take one more break and we're going to talk about the other aspect
of these myths, the mythology part of it, right? Right after this.
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Okay, so if you take a myth and you strip the mythology off and you just look at the kernel
of historicity and try to figure out what event it's actually describing, you don't want to just
forget the myth part. You want to go back and also look at the myth part too, because that
reveals a lot about humans and who we are and how we think spread out even across cultures
throughout the world. And there's a lot of similarities that pop up from examining geomythology,
especially with flood myths, even when you set aside the idea or should say even when you
account for the idea of missionaries spreading the Noah flood too.
So yeah, one of the things that's interesting to look at is how these myths are similar.
And one way that a lot of these flood myths are similar is that, and we've already seen a little
bit in what we've talked about, is oftentimes it's a man and a woman, usually a man and a wife
who are charged with gathering up the animals, with repopulating the earth afterward,
saving the species essentially. There's usually a warning, whether it's Noah's flood myth or
all the others, where someone comes along and says, you better get your act together,
earth, or tell everybody on earth, you were the messenger to get their act together or else
I will rain down, rain upon you. Right. Yeah. There's also sometimes a warning, I guess.
One of the warnings, Chuck, that came through, I think we said earlier that the Chinese have
like at least four flood myths. And one of the warnings that came through was to this brother
and sister who freed a thunder god from their father's, I guess chicken coop or whatever, their
father had captured him. And so the thunder god said, hey, thanks a lot, kids. By the way,
the things are about to get serious around here. You might want to build a boat. Yeah,
I think they built a boat. But they're one of those interesting stories where you said usually
it's a man and wife who end up having to repopulate the earth that put these two kids in the position
of having to repopulate. And that was a taboo, incest is basically the universal taboo, one of
and that was the same in ancient China as well. So in different versions of the story, either
the brother and sister basically got a pass this time. Another version is that the brother
had to go through a huge series of physical challenges and couldn't and that somehow the
earth became populated anyway. And the third version is that they just made everybody out of
clay that they made themselves. If you start really kind of looking at floods, there's like,
especially the purpose of the flood, that's the thing. It's very rare that the flood happens
in a flood myth just for fun. There's almost always a reason. Humans want there to be a
reason. So we've come up with different reasons over the years. And one of them is basically
the apocalypse that humanity is being wiped out usually as punishment and that we deserve to
survive and we would have to survive or else we wouldn't be around to be passing the story along.
So somebody had to survive. So that's where those people who repopulate the earth come from. But
the rest of us, we got wiped out because we displeased the gods. That's right. Another one is
that we started out as an ocean and nothing but ocean. So this is just a reset to that return
to our original state here on planet earth. And there are a lot of cultures around the world
that basically thought that we started out as an ocean from ancient Egypt, Norse, I think in Japan
as well. And basically, it's either returns us to a state of water or an island above an ocean.
Yeah. And that's so closely related to the apocalyptic one too. We just happen to be
returning to how things were before, which is also related to another kind of theme as a reason
for the flood, which is purification. Yes, you're being punished and yes, you're returning to this
primordial state. But the ultimate reason that say like God or the gods have is to purify things,
to get to rid the world of evil and just keep the good and start over with just the good basically.
That's another big one too. And they're all kind of pretty tightly wound up together.
Yeah. Then there's just angry gods and it might not have anything to do with
you doing anything wrong as a culture or getting your act together. It's just that the gods were
angry, so they kicked open the top of that mountain and it became a volcano. And sorry,
TS for you guys. Yeah, just happens. But that's still interesting that people,
there's a rationalization even in itself though, isn't it? It's just kind of like
sometimes that happens even if you didn't do anything wrong. I think so.
So there's another one too, that Emperor Yuh-Myth is a good example of industriousness,
people working together, people controlling things where the earth has done something crazy.
Maybe the gods were responsible, but humans managed to overcome it either in the form of like a
savior like Emperor Yuh. There's one in Bhutan. I believe there's a legend about Guru Rupoche
in the Zangpo Valley. He shows up and basically drains a lake exposing all this fertile farmland
where a village was then settled. And I apologize for this. I genuinely could not find a pronunciation
for it, Chuck. I really tried. But the Gunganiji aboriginal people, G-U-N-G-G-A-N-Y-J-I,
they have one where the tsunami keeps coming and coming and the sea levels are rising and rising.
So the people are organized and get together and start rolling boulders down into the sea and it
actually prevents the sea levels from rising any further. So I think that's probably my favorite
one, the industriousness and control ones. It's good stuff. And then people have gotten a little
weird over the years with trying to explain these away. There was a Hungarian psychoanalyst named
Giza Roim in the 1930s. It said, no, the reason why we have all these flood myths is because
they're just from people's dreams. And people in ancient times drank a lot of water and peed a
lot at night. And so they dreamt about floods and told stories about floods. Or maybe it is
the gods urinating on people, like literally, which, and there are myths that literally talk
about that, that floods are a result of gods peeing on earth. But I don't know about
about expanding that to like all the cultural flood myths all over the world for all time.
Right. And there's others that explain it as like men's jealousy of not being able to give birth,
and then it's a reference to the bursting of the amniotic sack or something like that.
I feel like when psychoanalysis gets involved, especially in this day and age, it's kind of
like, that was a nice try, everybody. Let's just move on to geomathology instead, you know?
I think so. That's where I'm putting my money, Chuck, geomathology. It's fantastic stuff.
And also, I should say, I want to give a shout out to one of our past episodes,
was there a real Atlantis? We were doing geomathology without even realizing it.
That's right. If you want to know more about geomathology and flood myths, then just start
searching the internet because there's a lot of interesting stuff out there about it. And since
I said that, it's time for Listener Mane. This is a shout out to one of the winners of the stuff
you should know, 5K. This is something that the stuff you should know, Army, puts together
every year now in a virtual way right now. But our buddy, Aaron Mazzel, is one of the people
who works on this. They're looking to do this again next year because here's the deal,
is they sent me this stuff afterward. And I was like, oh, we need to get this before.
So I'm going to go ahead and say it now, and then we'll see if we can remind people. But
people voted to have this happen in late September, early October. So 2022 is when it's
hopefully going to happen. Again, no official registration, no entry fee. There's an event
page, I guess, at the Stuff You Should Know Army Facebook site. And I think people had two weekends
to participate this year, and they had bike riders this year. So regardless of what your
status as an athlete is, they're finding ways for you to get involved, which is really cool.
So this is from Amanda, though, riding in to say that I'm a winner, baby. You guys are the best
been listening for years. And I was happy to participate in the virtual Stuff You Should Know
5K this year. It was a cool event that brought some really nice people together at our little
corner of the internet. I'm not a particularly good or fast runner, but I get out there,
and I did the dang thing, and that's what counts. The other participants in the 5K
radiate that spirit and are so encouraging of each other. Don't ask me how, but somehow
I achieved fastest 5K for a woman in this event. What a cool feeling. So today I listened to
Venus Flytraps on the way home and came across a package address Stuff You Should Know 5K
champ Amanda Thompson and just about cried and got a handcrafted by Stuff You Should Know Army
member Metal Rack for her efforts, and it's really great. That's pretty great. She has to buy her
own metal, though. I don't think so. That's fantastic, man. Congratulations, Amanda. That's
wonderful news, and congratulations to everybody who participated and finished or even just started
or even thought about doing it. Maybe you'll do it next year. Who knows? That's right. Congratulations
to everyone. Yeah, and again, that is a very cool thing that Stuff You Should Know fans do,
and it makes us love you guys even more. You got anything else? No, just be on the lookout next
late summer fall for news on the Army Facebook page. Yeah, somebody please remind us ahead of
time so we can tell everybody else. And if you want to remind us of something, we would love
to be reminded because that probably means we forgot, and you can put that reminder in the form
of an email which you can send to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts on my heart radio,
visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you
ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this
situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help and a different
hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life. Tell everybody, yeah,
everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say
bye-bye-bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular, and it turns out astrology is way
more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, international
banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are
about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.