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Many cultures have a flood myth. Is any one aware of any myth having to do with the last glacial period? Or do all mythologies start when the ice has melted and caused wide spread flooding?

BobB
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In the Pacific Northwest USA, the Indian lore has many flood myths. The area has its fair share of floods, however, there was a glacial lake called Lake Missoula during the last ice age. The lake was held back by ice dams that broke at least once (called a glacial lake outburst flood), flooding nearly the entire Pacific Northwest. Though there has never been a solid connection with this event and the Indian lore, it is often suggested whenever the two are mentioned in the same place. As a resident of the area, I hear it all the time whenever the area's ancient history is discussed.


nearly SOURCES

  1. Here's a source that talks about some of that lore, but not the glacial Lake Missoula.
  2. A typical article discussing the myths and the actual flooding.
  3. An example myth.

Addendum

It's a mistake to think that all or even most flood myths are the result of glacial melt. In fact, floods in general are the most common natural disaster; nearly every area in the world experiences them from time to time. Floods are most often caused by tsunamis and rivers overflowing from snow pack melt (not the same thing as glacial melt). There's a few notable exceptions throughout history, but most floods are caused by those two. And considering most ancient communities gathered around rivers and shorelines, it makes sense that a great many flood myths would develop around the world.

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Its more than possible, I know there are stories from the tribes of that event, the descriptions are too vivid. Just like its been proven that the Klamath kept the story of the formation of Crater lake, a 7000 year old event, the tribes of the Columbia kept stories of water that crested at the tops of mountains. That is not your average annual flood.

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Something definitely with snow and ice:

According to some, the Aymaran creator god was the snow god, Kun. Angry at human beings, Kun once covered creation with snow and ice, and nothing but evil spirits could survive on the frozen world. After this ice flood, it was the gods of fertility who sent their sons, the Eagle Men, to create a new people, the Paka-Jakes, who still live near Lake Titicaca.

Leeming, David A. (1994). Creation Myths of the World


Personally, I think every Heaven-Earth Separation story is about the last glacial period. Specifically about people living in glaciers in expanses between the heaven-ice (heaven/firmament are solid in this stories) and earth. Read for example some native american creation myths with this analogy and judge for your self. They are found all around the world, even in places like Ghana...


I like this part of a Krachi creation myth, containing mundane details of everyday life in a glacier (according to my interpretation):

In the beginning Wulbari (Heaven· male) lived on top of Asase Ya (Earth· female). Man lived between them, but with little room to move. Man's squirming irritated Wulbari so much that he left and went up above. One of the things that bothered Wulbari was an old woman who, when grinding maize, kept hitting him with her pestle, and the smoke from the cooking fires bothered his eyes. Some say that Wulbari was annoyed because men would sometimes wipe their dirty hands on him. The Krachi people say that there was an old woman who used to cut off bits of Wulbari to flavor her soup.

Leeming, David A. (1994). Creation Myths of the World


Btw: Shiva has a blue throat, which is the color of glaciers from the inside, white or gray skin and is associated with ice.

Tom Sol
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xaedes
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How about Fimbulwinter from Norse myth?

Fimbulwinter was a long winter that proceeded Ragnarök in Norse myth. This in turn was the final war of the gods and the almost complete destruction of everything. This is all in the past.

Personally, I suspect this is a good match to either an ice age or a severe volcanic dust event that caused winter not come, like the so called year without a summer.

David G.
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