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Until  recently, there were few scientific tools which could shed light on this  questionor the related issue of the historicity of Adam and Eve, the first  couple always included
 in the ancient myths of Paradise.  Then, in the late  1980's, Dr. Rebecca Cann and a team
 of paleo-geneticists observed that all  human beings carry around genetic markers inherited
 from our ancient  ancestors that might provide clues to when and where we originated.  So
 Cann  took genetic samples from all over the world to reconstruct our genetic family  tree.
 The results shook the foundations of science.  Cann's team  discovered that all females
 carry a particular genetic marker that must have  come from a single woman who was the
 sole ancestor of all women now living.   Moreover, they found that the time-frame for the
 "genetic Eve" to have lived  was relatively recent: Between 180,000 and 22,000 years ago.
 Paleontologists had previously toyed with estimates as far back as 4,000,000 years for
 our common ancestor.  So even the 180,000-year age was far too  recent for some of them.
 But even more disturbing was how the 22,000-year  estimate was derived.  Cann's team
 had argued that, if only two  individuals were involved, then the couple must have lived in
 even more  recent times; the 180,000-year estimate assumed an initial group of  thousands
 of people among whom the "genetic Eve" had distributed her genes by  having sex with a
 large number of men  However, if only a single couple had  started the process, the date of
 the pair could have been only about 22,000  years ago.
 What upset many scientists was that this time-frame was  uncomfortably close to the
 chronologies of Genesis and other ancient  traditons.  They had good reason to be worried.
 Other studies began to  confirm this recent date.  It was found, moreover, that roughly
 23,000 years  ago mankind had been located somewhere between Egypt and Mesopotamia
 --in  other words, in the region of Israel, at the time of the emergeance of modern  genes.
 Studies of domesticated animals were showing similar results,  as were various human
 migration studies.  Again and again, the era around  25,000 years ago was found to be the
 starting point for human civilization.   Ironically, a book had been written back in the
 1980's, before all the new  genetic discoveries, which had noted the peculiar fact that all
 the first  evidences of human inventiveness and true artistic expression emerged rather
 suddenly about 25,000 years ago; the title: The Creative Explosion.
 The pieces were coming together rapidly in the late 1990's.  By  1996, evidence showed
 that the world's males had likewise descended from a  single "genetic Adam" whose date
 was uncertain, but compatible with the  22,000-year age.  Further confirmation came in
 1997 that all males derive  from a single "Adam" and that mankind had not come together
 from multiple  simultaneous parallel populations developing in different areas, but from  a
 single population--and apparently a single couple--in one specific area:   Near  Israel.
 According to both Islamic and Jewish tradition, the  Garden of Eden was located in the
 viciinity of Jerusalem.  Although the  Greeks spoke of Atlantis as a kind of Paradise, it
 was not their Garden of  Eden, which they had located in the land of "Cohchis" where the
 Grove of  fruit trees was guarded by a Dragon or winged serpent-god.  Cholchis was to  be
 found by sailing south and east of Greece, but its exact location was  uncertain.
 The Nazis searched for Paradise in Tibet because they  believed Helena Blavatsky's
 claim that she had seen an ancient book in India  which said survivors of the Deluge had
 landed atop mountains north of India  around 9,549 BC.  The Nazis assumed these were
 the Himalayas, but they could  just as easily have been the mountains of eastern Turkey.
 The Nazis forgot  that the myths of India come from a people who had migrated into the
 Indus  valley from the north after the Mohenjo-Daro civilization collapsed c. 1,500  BC.
 But Blavatsky wrote about survivors of the Deluge, not of the original  Paradise.
 Much confusion exists between the paradise-like Atlantis  and the original Paradise of
 the Garden of the first couple. Francis Bacon,  the famous occultist said to have edited the
 King James Bible, was writing a  book when he died called The New Atlantis, in which he
 argued for  America being the remnant of Atlantis and a pre-flood Paradise.
 In  the Middle East there is no uncertainty.  The Garden was located in the region  of
 Jerusalem.  Genesis implies that Abraham and Lot had seen it during their  travels:
 "And Lot lifted up his eyes, and beheld all the plain of  Jordan, that it was well-
 watered everywhere, before the Lord destroyed  Sodom and Gomorrah, even as
 THE GARDEN OF THE LORD, like the land of  Egypt, as you come to Zoar."
 [Gen. 13:10]
 Notice how casually the comparison  to the Garden is inserted along with an ordinary
 geographic reference to a  place in Egypt, apparently the area near the Nile Delta from
 which Abraham  and Lot had recently come.  The obvious implication of the passage is
 that  Abraham and Lot had also recently passed through "the Garden of the Lord"  along
 their journeys.  And it was seemingly prior to their going into Egypt  because Egypt is
 mentioned after the Garden.  Of course, the scribes knew  that Abraham had passed by
 the mountains of Moriah around Jerusalem before  going on to Egypt.  Abraham knew of
 these mountains because he was able to  recognize them from afar off when he later would
 bring Isaac there.
 
 
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