None. No evidence at all. The flood story is just that, a story.
No, the Ice Age did not automatically follow the world wide flood. The Drain Off followed the world wide flood.
No. There is not enough water locked up as ice to completely flood all of the land all around the world.
Noah's Flood was a universal flood, to destroy all the earth and everything in it- God was not pleased with the way the people were acting- except Noah and his family- so he spared them of death.
There are a wide variety of circumstances in which a lawyer can prove a case of negligence against a nursing home. Evidence in these types of cases typically involve a video or audio recording of some kind demonstrating the accused negligence.
Only those who are very religious believe in a flood because the only "evidence" for a world wide flood is in religious books and not in any reputable publications. As for a "flood" causing an ice age, again there is no reputable evidence for this.
a canyon, gorge or vale
The Biblical flood would have caused the death of all life on earth, except for those on the arc, which would have resulted in fossils that are now found. Fossils being found in different layers of rocks could have been a result of how they settled as the waters receded.
Abraham, Sarah, and Isaac were not born when the world wide flood came. Abraham was a descendant of Shem, one of Noah's sons. (approximately 9 generations between Shem and Abraham.)
Another answer from our community:Some Non-Biblical Evidences World-wide Flood traditions, world-wide water laid sediments and fossil distribution and graveyards in rocks of all dated ages, world wide evidence of earlier very high river and sea levels, earliest civilizations originating in the area around the area as described in the Bible are but a few of the evidences which support the Biblical account.
Because of the great flood
A:The Book of Genesis describes a great, world-wide flood that killed all living things, except Noah, his family and the creatures that he took onto a boat, or Ark, that God told him to build so that he would be saved. There are so many parallels in this story to the flood in the earlier Epic of Gilgamesh, that scholars have thought that the Genesis flood story must have been adapted from the Gilgamesh flood story. However, Ian Wilson (Before the Flood) presents a well argued case for there really having been a great flood on which both accounts were based. He believes that the one event they are both based on is the inundation of what is now the Black Sea. There is evidence that rising ocean levels at the end of the Younger Dryas, around 5200 BCE, caused the Mediterranean Sea to breach the Bosphorus and flood the former fertile, low-lying plain.
It's called a 'flood plain'.