I
Seems to me to still make sense as it is. The opening part of Chapter 10 is describing the first few generations of Japheth and Ham, the principal Gentile races, then a small portion about the basic formation of the first cities and nations, and then resumes with a general overview of Gentile-Shem's offspring which flows into the next chapter very well. Makes me think perhaps to Tintin's point of perhaps Tower of Babel occurring around time of Peleg, note that the chapter 10 end with the races spawning from Joktan. Thus ending the Table of Gentile nations at its last racial divergence with Peleg as the last forerunner to Abraham, Isaac, and Israel. Then in Genesis 11 resumes the racial focuses more on Peleg's progeny as they lead up to Abraham which then flows seamlessly into Chapter 12 about Abraham. Guess it's that Continuity point.
A good example I think be comparing Genesis 10's written structure within the Genesis narrative to Genesis 5 and how it flows with Genesis 4 & 6. Events in those chapters running somewhat concurrently with Chapter 5 merely being the pre-Flood Table of nations specifically on Seth's male line up to Noah, with a few events that are in truth only a few short lines that have mystified thinkers for centuries such as Enoch's taking, Noah's unnamed wife, when the fallen angel and nephilim stuff occurred, even whether or not Noah's carnal dad Lamech of House Seth was a somewhat good guy as indicated by his blessing of Noah or a bad guy that perished in the Flood by his comparatively shorter age than his predecessors. For that matter even how old were Shem, Ham, and Japheth when the Flood happened and who was the oldest brother lol.
A good example I think be comparing Genesis 10's written structure within the Genesis narrative to Genesis 5 and how it flows with Genesis 4 & 6. Events in those chapters running somewhat concurrently with Chapter 5 merely being the pre-Flood Table of nations specifically on Seth's male line up to Noah, with a few events that are in truth only a few short lines that have mystified thinkers for centuries such as Enoch's taking, Noah's unnamed wife, when the fallen angel and nephilim stuff occurred, even whether or not Noah's carnal dad Lamech of House Seth was a somewhat good guy as indicated by his blessing of Noah or a bad guy that perished in the Flood by his comparatively shorter age than his predecessors. For that matter even how old were Shem, Ham, and Japheth when the Flood happened and who was the oldest brother lol.
Seems to me to still make sense as it is.
The Hebrew word "yalad" is controversial, but most Bible scholars agree it doesn't necessarily mean "fathered" in the sense of an immediate descendent. In other words, Nimrod carried the blood of Cush, and continued his royal line, but he was not Cush's genetic "son." One possibility, among many is that Nimrod was Cush's grandson through one of Cush's daughters.
The Genesis 3 prophecy of the "seed of the woman" that one day a human being would be born, descended from Eve would bruise the head of satan the serepent. But God also predicted the serpent would produce "a seed" who would be an enemy of the seed of the woman.
Of course Jesus fulfilled "the seed of the woman"; whereas the "seed" of the serpent" was to be fulfilled by the Antichrist, the literal son of satan. This means the Antichrist has to be a Nephilim, just like the Nephilim described in Genesis 6 who were the offspring of fallen angels who had mated with human women. When we look Gen.6:4 it says that the Nephilim were the "mighty men" which were of old, men of renown.
The Hebrew word for "mighty man" is "gibbor". This is the same word used to describe Nimrod in Gen.10:8-9:
"And Cush begat Nimrod: he began to be a mighty one [gibbor] in the earth. He was a mighty hunter [gibbor tsayid] before the Lord: therefore it is said, Even Nimrod the mighty hunter [gibbor tsayid] before the Lord."
Nimrod was raised as the son and heir of Cush, but there was something very special about him that it became a popular even down to the time of Moses for him to be called a [gibbor]. I believe his father was in fact satan, the chief of the fallen angels, and Nimrod himself was a Nephilim, a throwback to the days before the flood.
(The Second Coming of the Antichrist, Peter D. Goodgame)