We would not look at archaeology to prove or disprove flooding, we would look at geology. The Bible does not say the earth is 6000 years old anywhere in the Old or New Testaments, so that is a non starter. One man was created by God out of the earth, Adam, Eve was then created from flesh and bone, the rib of Adam. We already have some nice DNA tracking that looks at origins of humanity, that is the topic for another thread really because it is so big. Archaeology wont prove or disprove any of those examples.
We have p(name removed by moderator)ointed where in the Universe the big bang type event originated though, with geothermal mapping.
Such a discovery would be celebrated, not disputed…
People would disbelieve it and say it is a fake, a UFO, or any other theory. Science is not superior to dogma and should not be set in competition to Sacred Scripture. They are two separate disciplines, religion and science, they complement each other but do not provide answers for each other or even proofs.
But in the past 50 years, there have been massive undertakings to research the claim - even by Jewish researchers
A Jewish researcher is just like any other researcher, there is no single mode of opinion, research or being. We cannot make a blanket statement
They themselves have come to the conclusion that the Exodus is a myth.
I am not sure what evidence is going to be left of peoples wandering deserts for 40 years a very long time ago, and if there is evidence found, how do we know what culture it belongs to, many at that time were nomadic or in transit due to climate conditions and wars and trade.
Early middle eastern archaeology …
Early Archaeology began in the middle east with a thrust of biblical type scholars from USA and UK who went to the Holy Land and began looking for proofs. They soon realised that this really needed an approach that included quite a few disciplines and then the science of Archaeology became a robust and better verified scientific method.
The older way of digging to prove or disprove God and Jesus and the Jewish history was abandoned. There are several very good early archaeologists who were there, teach or have taught in the States and UK and speak of this time. There is also an excellent body of knowledge on this in academic centers within Jerusalem itself.
I suggest look at the entire history Your final quote where is it from and who published it and in what article?
because
It might be out of date or not well researched. There are artefacts.
Here is the Tel Dan Inscription
There are quite a few artefacts such as inscriptions that talk about who beat who in war and what the spoils were.