I haven't watched these yet, however to the Noah's Ark story, I leave this:"Suppose you picked up the newspaper tomorrow morning and were startled to see headlines announcing the discovery of a large ship high on the snowy slopes of Mt. Ararat in eastern Turkey. As you hurriedly scanned the article, you learned that a team from the Institute for Creation Research had unearthed the vessel and their measurements and studies had determined that it perfectly matched the description of Noah's Ark given in the book of Genesis. Would this be proof at lastthe "smoking gun" as it werethat the earliest chapters of the Bible were true and that the story they told of a six-day creation and a universal flood was a sober, scientific account?Perhaps surprisingly, the answer is no. Even this sensational find is not enough to validate a literal reading of Genesis..."Evidence of a global flood should not just be limited to a few pieces of wood and animal bones on a mountaintop. the geological record would abound with evidence.I've heard the chariot wheel story before and I'm incredibly unimpressed. Have you ever been to the sea and thrown something in and watched as it was washed away by the tide and currents? In addition, during that period the Egyptians were a military force to be reckoned with, sending armies far and wide, including across the sea, on rickety wooden boats. All it would take is a heavy storm, a cataclysmic battle, a clumsy sailor and all sorts of military equipment could end up in the briney blue.I've not heard the Sodom story before, so I won't comment.The mountaintop with the golden calf sounds interesting but from memory, wasn't Moses supposed to have destroyed the calf when he came down from Sinai? I admit my Bible studies memory is a bit faint on that one, but I'm sure he destroyed the altar and forced the Israelites to eat the ground up gold or something.Either way, that they found burning on Mt Sinai is not impressive. The mountain has been a hotbed for religious pilgrims for thousands of years, many of whom would need to light fires to eat, to worship and to burn heretics, it would be more remarkable if there was NOT evidence of burning on the mountain.