Where was the Garden of Eden located? Scientist makes shocking new claim
Holy plot twist!
A provocative may not have been in Mesopotamia, roughly modern-day Iraq, as has been long-assumed — but rather in Egypt, under the towering shadow of the much older Great Pyramid of Giza.
Dr. Konstantin Borisov, a computer engineer, is shaking up biblical geography with a study published in the journal Archaeological Discovery, claiming the famed paradise where Adam and Eve once frolicked may have flourished on Egyptian soil.
The Bible describes a river flowing out of Eden that split into four branches — the Gihon, Pishon, Tigris, and Euphrates. Scholars have long assumed Eden was in Iraq, home to the Tigris and Euphrates.
But Borisov claims the ancient rivers could also correspond to the Nile (Gihon), Euphrates, Tigris, and the Indus River (Pishon).
