And the Lord said: "Go forth and model Moses"

I guess with Climate change enlightenment was fun while it lasted. But now it’s dead (George Monbiot) there’s not much for those modelers and supercomputers at NCAR to do. So why not model parting the Red Sea? Beats making golden calves I suppose.

Charleton Heston in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments, MPA, 1956

From the National Center for Atmospheric Research:

Parting the waters: Computer modeling applies physics to Red Sea escape route

September 21, 2010

BOULDER—The biblical account of the parting of the Red Sea has inspired and mystified people for millennia. A new computer modeling study by researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and the University of Colorado at Boulder (CU) shows how the movement of wind as described in the book of Exodus could have parted the waters.

The computer simulations show that a strong east wind, blowing overnight, could have pushed water back at a bend where an ancient river is believed to have merged with a coastal lagoon along the Mediterranean Sea. With the water pushed back into both waterways, a land bridge would have opened at the bend, enabling people to walk across exposed mud flats to safety. As soon as the wind died down, the waters would have rushed back in.

red sea

The physics of a land bridge. This illustration shows how a strong wind from the east could push back waters from two ancient basins–a lagoon (left) and a river (right)–to create a temporary land bridge. New research that such a physical process could have led to a parting of waters similar to the description in the biblical account of the Red Sea. (Illustration by Nicolle Rager Fuller.)

The study is intended to present a possible scenario of events that are said to have taken place more than 3,000 years ago, although experts are uncertain whether they actually occurred. The research was based on a reconstruction of the likely locations and depths of Nile delta waterways, which have shifted considerably over time.

“The simulations match fairly closely with the account in Exodus,” says Carl Drews of NCAR, the lead author. “The parting of the waters can be understood through fluid dynamics. The wind moves the water in a way that’s in accordance with physical laws, creating a safe passage with water on two sides and then abruptly allowing the water to rush back in.”

The study is part of a larger research project by Drews into the impacts of winds on water depths, including the extent to which Pacific Ocean typhoons can drive storm surges. By pinpointing a possible site south of the Mediterranean Sea for the crossing, the study also could be of benefit to experts seeking to research whether such an event ever took place. Archeologists and Egyptologists have found little direct evidence to substantiate many of the events described in Exodus.

The work, published in the online journal, PLoS ONE, arose out of Drews’ master’s thesis in atmospheric and oceanic sciences at CU.  The computing time and other resources were supported by the National Science Foundation.

Wind on the water

The Exodus account describes Moses and the fleeing Israelites trapped between the Pharaoh’s advancing chariots and a body of water that has been variously translated as the Red Sea or the Sea of Reeds. In a divine miracle, the account continues, a mighty east wind blows all night, splitting the waters and leaving a passage of dry land with walls of water on both sides. The Israelites are able to flee to the other shore. But when the Pharaoh’s army attempts to pursue them in the morning, the waters rush back and drown the soldiers.

Wind setdown in the Nile Delta. Sustained winds can cause an event known as a wind setdown in which water levels are temporarily lowered. This animation shows how a strong east wind over the Nile Delta could have pushed water back into ancient waterways after blowing for about nine hours, exposing mud flats and possibly allowing people to walk across. (Animation by Tim Scheitlin and Ryan McVeigh, NCAR. News media terms of use*)

Scientists from time to time have tried to study whether the parting of the waters, one of the famous miracles in the Bible, can also be understood through natural processes. Some have speculated about a tsunami, which would have caused waters to retreat and advance rapidly. But such an event would not have caused the gradual overnight divide of the waters as described in the Bible, nor would it necessarily have been associated with winds.

Other researchers have focused on a phenomenon known as “wind setdown,” in which a particularly strong and persistent wind can lower water levels in one area while piling up water downwind. Wind setdowns, which are the opposite of storm surges, have been widely documented, including an event in the Nile delta in the 19th century when a powerful wind pushed away about five feet of water and exposed dry land.

A previous computer modeling study into the Red Sea crossing by a pair of Russian researchers, Naum Voltzinger and Alexei Androsov, found that winds blowing from the northwest at minimal hurricane force (74 miles per hour) could, in theory, have exposed an underwater reef near the modern-day Suez Canal. This would have enabled people to walk across. The Russian study built on earlier work by oceanographers Doron Nof of Florida State University and Nathan Paldor of Hebrew University of Jerusalem that looked at the possible role of wind setdown.

The new study, by Drews and CU oceanographer Weiqing Han, found that a reef would have had to be entirely flat for the water to drain off in 12 hours. A more realistic reef with lower and deeper sections would have retained channels that would have been difficult to wade through. In addition, Drews and Han were skeptical that refugees could have crossed during nearly hurricane-force winds.

Reconstructing ancient topography

Studying maps of the ancient topography of the Nile delta, the researchers found an alternative site for the crossing about 75 miles north of the Suez reef and just south of the Mediterranean Sea. Although there are uncertainties about the waterways of the time, some oceanographers believe that an ancient branch of the Nile River flowed into a coastal lagoon then known as the Lake of Tanis. The two waterways would have come together to form a U-shaped curve.

An extensive analysis of archeological records, satellite measurements, and current-day maps enabled the research team to estimate the water flow and depth that may have existed 3,000 years ago. Drews and Han then used a specialized ocean computer model to simulate the impact of an overnight wind at that site.

They found that a wind of 63 miles an hour, lasting for 12 hours, would have pushed back waters estimated to be six feet deep. This would have exposed mud flats for four hours, creating a dry passage about 2 to 2.5 miles long and 3 miles wide. The water would be pushed back into both the lake and the channel of the river, creating barriers of water on both sides of newly exposed mud flats.

As soon as the winds stopped, the waters would come rushing back, much like a tidal bore. Anyone still on the mud flats would be at risk of drowning.

The set of 14 computer model simulations also showed that dry land could have been exposed in two nearby sites during a windstorm from the east. However, those sites contained only a single body of water and the wind would have pushed the water to one side rather than creating a dry passage through two areas of water.

“People have always been fascinated by this Exodus story, wondering if it comes from historical facts,” Drews says. “What this study shows is that the description of the waters parting indeed has a basis in physical laws.”

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Now, if we can just get them to turn their attention to the more recent portion of the Holocene, say 1000 years ago to present, we might be able to get another good movie line out of it:

Let the name of Mann be stricken from every book and tablet, stricken from all pylons and obelisks, stricken from every monument of AGW. Let the name of Mann be unheard and unspoken, erased from the memory of men for all time.

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James Evans
September 21, 2010 10:51 pm

Apparently, next they’re going to take a look at whether a cow really could jump over the moon, if given the right atmospheric conditions, and a cat and a fiddle.

kwik
September 21, 2010 10:54 pm

Is this for the next IPCC report?

John in NZ
September 21, 2010 11:08 pm

My theory (as in I made it up) is that the Red Sea is tidal but the Mediterranean is not. The Jews crossed at low tide but the Egyptians followed as the tide came in. Neither the Jews nor the Egyptian soldiers knew about tides since both lived on the Mediterranean coast so they explained the outgoing and incoming tides as an act of God.
Alternatively the story is fiction. Either explanation is fine by me. Neither need modelling

UK Sceptic
September 21, 2010 11:23 pm

I found myself checking the date just in case I’d fallen through a time warp and ended up in April 1st, 2011.
It seems these people never cease to find ways to waste taxpayers money.

September 21, 2010 11:23 pm

leaving a passage of dry land
So the wind dried the mud at the bottom into dry land too? …….um…ok…..

September 21, 2010 11:27 pm

But when the Pharaoh’s army attempts to pursue them in the morning, the waters rush back and drown the soldiers
The wind suddenly stopped? So why didn’t they cross at the same time as the Jews did?
powerful wind pushed away about five feet of water
The entire Egyptian army drown in 5 feet of water?

JPeden
September 21, 2010 11:28 pm

Scientists from time to time have tried to study whether the parting of the waters, one of the famous miracles in the Bible, can also be understood through natural processes.
So I guess it must be completely impossible that big ice shelfs would ever break off naturally? Or that CO2 is not needed for current warming?

September 21, 2010 11:34 pm

They found that a wind of 63 miles an hour, lasting for 12 hours, would have pushed back waters estimated to be six feet deep.
Just at 63 mph, and just for 12 hours. I wonder what the Israelites looked like after being in winds like that for 12 hours? 😉
creating a dry passage about 2 to 2.5 miles long and 3 miles wide
You know, it seems to believe it was a miracle is easier than to believe it was this scenario. 🙂

September 21, 2010 11:37 pm

Lance says:
September 21, 2010 at 8:41 pm
Could we also get a rain of toads on the campus of Penn State?
Maybe. But I know we have science that eats up his science.

September 21, 2010 11:47 pm

It is written in the Bible, that “Lord let blown the strong wind all the night”, but the puzzling thing is “and the water stood as a wall on their right and left”, when they were passing the corridor.

chasseral
September 21, 2010 11:59 pm

Clearly a climate disruption.

redneck
September 22, 2010 12:03 am

“The study is intended to present a possible scenario of events that are said to have taken place more than 3,000 years ago, although experts are uncertain whether they actually occurred. The research was based on a reconstruction of the likely locations and depths of Nile delta waterways, which have shifted considerably over time.”
The parallels between this study and AGW, er ah that should be ACD, are absolutely amazing. Not only are experts unsure that the parting of the Red Sea actually ever took place, just like ACD, but they have models to prove how it is possible, just like ACD.

September 22, 2010 12:26 am

Here is an example of a more recent “miracle”…
http://www.canada.com/Sockeye+return+perfect+miracle/3467901/story.html
Many local commentators, including The Vancouver Sun, has said that Climate Change can now be ruled out as the reason for low numbers in the past (as recently as last year). Just a couple of months ago scientists wanted to spend a million dollars per stream to build something that would help the fish deal with the hot water induced by heat trapping CO2. Such a scheme can now be abandoned, and the money spent on Bio Diversity instead…
http://www.protectbiodiversity.ca/downloads/reports/
the latest fallback campaign if “global climate disruption” doesn’t take off.
This significant fish return event garnered no notice by WUWT however (except in an occasional comment by a reader) ?

September 22, 2010 12:27 am

There is no surprise in this report. It’s just more of the same: research resources being squandered in support of a religious belief.
Given this new direction I suppose that they will even be slipping in a new acronym. Network for Christian Anecdotal Research fits pretty well. Will they figure out that water-to-wine trick for us, too?! Maybe they can model all those cool storm clouds that always come rolling in just after the crucifixion scenes.

September 22, 2010 12:37 am

Oh god not this old chestnut. The Red sea is an area of tectonic plate movement. There are several inland lakes along the line of the Suez canal and given current rates of land rise, the inlet to these lakes from the Red sea would have been at or around sea level at the supposed time of the exodus.
This creates an extremely dangerous area of shallow water. When the wind and tide is right, the water would be relatively shallow and easy to cross. However if there is a shift in the wind and/or change of tides, then there are two large bodies of water (the Red Sea and inland lakes) and a narrow strait between.
The apparent “parting of the Red Sea” was simply the way the sea became quiet at a change in tide/wind whereupon those with local knowledge could walk through the Sea along shallows from one side of the strait to the other.
Understanding the story of Exodus isn’t rocket science. It is very likely a real occurrence as described above which was written down and interpreted as best they could from known events from accounts of those who were there … and it is worth remembering that the Israelites were from the Mediterranean which has next to no tide and so they would be unfamiliar which many normal tidal events which other people from areas away from the med wouldn’t have found at all exceptional.

September 22, 2010 12:54 am

My concern with this story is not the actual content (and the modellers state that they don’t know if the event actually happenned) but that state or government funding can be used to examine a myth, legend, or other type of fiction the underpins a set of untestable beliefs, no matter how strongly held by the believers. If these so-called scientists (perhaps ‘believeists’ would be a more suitable title) spent their own money on this investigation, that ‘s fine, but I would bet a dollar to knob of clay that they didn’t! ROTFLMAO!

September 22, 2010 1:07 am

And … there is clear evidence that the inland lakes on the Suez Canal were part of the Red Sea in Egyptian times, because they built a canal from the Nile to this part of the “Red Sea” which they would only do if it had been open to the Sea. However it is also clear that it stopped being part of the Red Sea during Egyptian times as the “sea” terminus of the Canal is littered with Egyptian artefacts which appeared just to have been left as they were and are now many many miles away from the Sea.

Ken Hall
September 22, 2010 1:33 am

I watched an interesting item on the local evening news on Monday evening. The weather presenter was examining the forces of wind produced in cities, where buildings funnel winds into higher forces which can damage property. She used the wind Tunnel at BAE Wharton to test how well people stand up to such winds. This wind tunnel is used for designing military jets so is cutting edge and very accurate.
She was having difficulty standing up unaided in a constant wind of 45 MPH. They used a system of ropes to hold her in place so that they could increase the wind. She had to be tied to the spot to be able to withstand winds of 65 MPH. However she was having a great deal of trouble breathing.
So to pick the enormous holes in this “theory”, There is simply no way that there would have been constant winds in excess of 63MPH all coming from the same direction for such a long duration. In the incredibly unlikely event that there had been, then there is no way that the Hebrews could have walked across a muddy plain into such winds.
There is one important connection between this bible story and CAGW though.
That is in both cases they are using powerful computer modelling to support a theological theory in support of a religion.

RichieP
September 22, 2010 1:34 am

This is all very well, but has anyone worked out the carbon footprint of the Pillar of Fire?

Al Gore's Holy Hologram
September 22, 2010 1:35 am

This was a waste of time as it has been widely recognised by archaeologists, Assyriologists and Egyptologists that the whole story is not an historical event. Only religious literalists hold on to this. It’s a mythological origin story very much like late stories of King Arthur. The life of Moses and the story of the Exodus does not fit in with any known history or chronology of Egypt or the Near East. Even at Tel Aviv University students are taught not to see it as historical. See Ze’ev Herzog or Thomas L. Thompson for more.

AdderW
September 22, 2010 1:44 am

so, if the wind is strong enough to move the water, how then was it possible for people to walk in this strong wind??

dearieme
September 22, 2010 1:45 am

“… although experts are uncertain whether they actually occurred…”: there’s such a plethora of experts nowadays.

Ralph
September 22, 2010 1:59 am

.
Wrong sea.
This was the Reed Sea on the coast of the Mediterranean … And the waters receded because of a great tsunami, caused by the eruption of Thera (Santorini).
How do we know this? Because the accounts tell us so.
God says to Moses:
Take handfulls of ash from the hearth and throw them into the air, where they will fall as a light dust all across the lands of Egypt.
There could be no better description of the long-range effects of a large volcano. An eye-witness account, no less.
.

Huth
September 22, 2010 2:02 am

Great that such research goes on! Learning through play. What’s good for kids is good for adults too. Yay! I don’t know who said it and my rendering may be inexact but there’s a lovely quote to the effect that ‘anyone who thinks play and education should be separated doesn’t know the first thing about either.’
It doesn’t really matter whether the bible myth is true or not. It’s hardly provable one way or the other with such a time lag. But the research into the effects of strong winds on bodies of water is interesting in its own right and if people want to speculate about the source of ancient myths, let them. No harm done and we might find out something interesting.
Thanks for the story.

Stacey
September 22, 2010 2:08 am

I suppose the probability of another strong wind in the last 3000 years would be an interesting and rare event and thus the models confirm what we already don’t know.

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