Thoroughly enjoyable, with some interesting locations. Not sure why it is considered dangerous, but maybe because origin stories from different religions seem to match (which threatens the division of religion), and talk of survivors who set about giving people the knowledge to start civilizing again (which threatens muh evolution theories). These also curiously match with geological records of the scorched layer that covered most of the Northern Hemisphere, and disastrous flooding about 11600 years ago. Also, the ancients had documented in which part of the galaxy the meteors resided, which we appear to be entering shortly.
Thoroughly enjoyable, with some interesting locations. Not sure why it is considered dangerous, but maybe because origin stories from different religions seem to match (which threatens the division of religion), and talk of survivors who set about giving people the knowledge to start civilizing again (which threatens muh evolution theories). These also curiously match with geological records of the scorched layer that covered most of the Northern Hemisphere, and disastrous flooding about 11600 years ago. Also, the ancients had documented in which part of the galaxy the meteors resided, which we appear to be entering shortly.
Disastrous flooding, you say.
It's almost like there's a very Good Book that told us that happened...
... and others too.
But yes, it seems that Noah's ark really happened.
There is also the Mt Aratat remains that were claimed to have the wreck of Noah's Ark
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/100428-noahs-ark-found-in-turkey-science-religion-culture