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For some time during the Middle Ages, many European Christian scholars continued to accept Greek mythical history at face value, thus asserting that Deucalion's flood was a regional flood, that occurred a few centuries later than the global one survived by Noah's family.
On the basis of the archaeological stele known as the Parian Chronicle, Deucalion's Flood was usually fixed as occurring sometime around c. 1528 BC.
Deucalion's flood may be dated in the chronology of Saint Jerome to ca.
1460 BC.
According to Augustine of Hippo ( City of God XVIII, 8, 10 ,& 11 ) Deucalion and his father Prometheus were contemporaries of Moses.
According to Clement of Alexandria in his Stromata, "... in the time of Crotopus occurred the burning of Phaethon, and the deluges of Deucalion.

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