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.

From the National Center for Atmospheric Research:
Parting the waters: Computer modeling applies physics to Red Sea escape route
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.
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.
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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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Well, I guess if they can model that a trace gas can cause 1 to 6°C global warming, they can model anything.
Now let’s see them model a quick US economic recovery!
☺
Ken Hall says: September 22, 2010 at 1:33 am
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.
That was my take as well. One simply cannot walk nor breath in near hurricane force winds. As many have experienced in Colorado’s front range, the Chinook winds often exceed hurricane force. Trying to do anything outdoors in those winds is not only ridiculously difficult, it is deadly.
How does one test the null hypothesis: “They just made it up”
From: Stacey on September 22, 2010 at 3:41 am (emphasis added)
The what? Seeing polar bears and the Chicken of the Polar Sea mingling, now that would be a miracle!
Strange it’s never happened since …
So its only been windy once in more than 2000 years?
I can’t help but think of this when this when talking about Moses.
Back on the topic at hand, interestingly enough, the Bible does tells us that God caused a wind to blow all night long. It took all night for the waters to part.
After reading many of the comments, I can understand where ‘AGW is a religion’ comes from.
Man-made global Warming belief bears the hallmarks of what traditionally would be recognised as a religion.
Ark of the Covenant – (climate computer models)
Commandments – (drive a Prius, use CFL bulbs, do not eat meat etc.)
Heaven – (off-grid, wattle & daub housing)
Hell – (runaway greenhouse warming)
Indulgences – (carbon offsets)
Infidels – (warming skeptics)
Priests – (climate scientists)
Prophets – (Al Gore, R. Pachauri, James Hansen)
Prophecy – (floods, hurricanes, pestilence)
Salvation – (the halting of carbon emitting industrial progress)
Self-flagellation – (walk to work)
Sin – (Co2 emissions)
Scriptures – (IPCC reports)
THE END (is Nigh) – (Deja Vu)
This is actually VERY old news. The fluctuation of sea/river level was noted by Josephus Flavius (circa 30-100 CE) in his history of the Jews and the account of their passing. Unlike the bible, Josephus talks about the great winds that acompanied their crossing. In addition, the translator, Whitson (circa mid 1800’s) notes that it is said that Alexander the Great passed into Egypt in much the same manner, except that the river wasn’t dry but only came up to his midrift at the low levels.
I would like to suggest that we take another look at this research.
It may be costly and may not achieve anything practical.
But it would be very good value and welll worth while,
if it kept the AGW crowd amused and stopped them planning to impose needless, destructive taxes on CO@ur momisugly emissions.
My grandmother, Edith Haun (I don’t know what her stage name was), was an extra in the 1923 version, which was d’Mille’s first attempt at this saga. I think she is in the youtube clip but it runs too fast. I will have to watch my copy (which is old itself) of this film and try to find her again. If this is the one with the two stories shown in tandem, she appears as the leper at the end. It might be the King of Kings one. She was in both. She traveled to Chicago as a young woman to become a trained dancer. She appeared in stage productions, and early versions of the New York City Rockets (before they were named that) as well as in silent movies.
Just read the story in todays newspaper (Daily Express). This is now Gospel!
Like the mods, I tend to feel that we’re rather losing the plot here and ending up having a religious history wrangle. Take a look at Monbiot’s Guardian page guys and gals – he’s back on the attack and hammering us sceptics for our credulity:
‘A rich collection of unfounded beliefs is a common characteristic of those who deny – despite the overwhelming scientific evidence – that man-made global warming is taking place. I’ve listed a few examples before, but I’ll jog your memories.’
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/georgemonbiot/2010/sep/21/climate-sceptics-evidence-gullible
Here’s the real evidence issue and, despite his apparent retreat, the Moonbat is fully back in action.
I bet it was the NCAR computers that modeled the oil spill swooping around the Florida Keys, side-swiping the east coast, and finally covering the western Irish beaches in oil.
Pretty animations do not always mean accurate animations!
Have you ever tried walking upon recently de-watered mud flats, like at a midwestern reservoir when it is drained for renovation? I have.
YOU CANNOT WALK UPON THE MUDFLATS BECAUSE YOU WILL SINK IN UP TO YOUR HIPS!
The water-engorged silty sediments are simply too wet and too soft to walk on. Even after two weeks of exposure to the sun it is impossible.
In my local area two geniuses in a 4 wheel drive tried to do a little running around on the mudflats of a reservoir 3 weeks after it had been drained. They made it about 200 feet from shore before they buried the truck in the muck up above the bottoms of the doors. The doors wouldn’t open, so they crawled out the windows and waded through the muck back to shore. Then it rained. Put an inch of water in the cab of the truck. It was another three weeks before they got that truck out of there.
The wind may have parted the waters, but there wouldn’t have been any walking on what was exposed.
I would rather pay for these people to use their models for such tangential activities than what they are usually trying to stuff down our throats and remove from our pockets, and on precious little real evidence.
Gary Mount says:
That ‘Miracle’ you were talKing about- back in the 90’s I had the privilege of knowing one of the oldest commercial fishermen in on the Pacific coast, Jack Guerin he’d been fishing since he was a kid he was 83 at the time. Jack told me “This handwringing
about the Salmon is just a way of controlling the Fishing industry and Logging.”
“It’s all cycles,nothing more nothing less.””The Salmon will come back-listen to what
the local tribes said, it’s simple-cycles-the ocean gets warm then cold,the sun warm then cold,I don’t need to be as smart as Al Gore to figgure that one out!”
Anthony, does September 21 have the same significance in Colorado as April 1 has in Europe and New Zealand?
REPLY: well I’m not from any of those place so not sure exactly what you are referring to. But if it is the Autumnal equinox, yes. – Anthony
There is a simpler explanation: it was a typo. It should read “partying at the red sea” — the Egyptians got completely sloshed.
did they also model the aerodynamics of the pharaohs chariots, and the jews donkey carts in a sustained 63 mile an hour wind and exactly what would it gust up to?
Since Immanuel Velikovsky has been mentioned a couple of times in the preceding discussion, it’s worth noting that he held that the consensus chronology was wrong.
The key to all of Velikovsky’s work was an Egyptian document called the Papyrus Ipuwer, which he claimed was actually an account of the biblical plagues, “written by an eyewitness to the plagues and the Exodus.” From this Velikovsky concluded that the established chronology of Egypt and the rest of the region was inflated by some six centuries, “written in duplicate form,” a “confusion of centuries” that “makes the life of many personages double; descendants are transformed into ancestors, and entire peoples and empires are invented.”*
Velikovsky spent many years and three volumes attempting a reconstruction of Middle Eastern chronology, based on what he saw as a correspondence between biblical and Egyptian history. He also held that the events described in the Papyrus Ipuwer were “the forerunners and aftermaths of a great cataclysm . . . Earthquakes, eruptions of volcanoes, changes of the sea profile, were some of the results of that catastrophe.” It was the latter that made the escape from Egypt possible.
The “great cataclysm” of course Velikovsky describes at length in his fascinating, but controversial (if not entirely fanciful) Worlds in Collision.
* From a rare document, Theses for the Reconstruction of Ancient History, Scripta Academica Hierosolymitana, 1945.
/Mr Lynn
As Carl Sagan took some delight in pointing out [in BROCA’S BRAIN – Random House,1979], Velikovsky was correct when he predicted that the surface of Venus would be hot (but for the wrong reasons), whereas all the proper astronomical models, including those of Sagan himself, were wrong – but for the right reasons.
Perhaps there is a moral to be drawn here…???
Arctic penguins. That would be Aptenodytes aurorae no doubt.
http://www.northpolepenguin.com/penguin/aurora.php
Lot of moaners on this thread. And yet it does state clearly that this is only a ‘spin-off’, a plus, a bonus, of a larger study.
“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.”
I’m amazed so many people don’t seem to understand how pure maths and science work. Also amazed so many people are so lacking in a sense of humour.