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  • Flood of Claims for 'Noah's Ark'

    Flood of claims for 'Noah's Ark' Legendary vessel of Genesis story goes from nowhere to everywhere

    WorldNetDaily, OR
    July 17 2006

    By Joe Kovacs

    After centuries of scouring the Earth for Noah's Ark, claims are now
    flooding in that the legendary vessel of the Bible has been found.

    'Noah's Ark' by Pennsylvania artist Edward Hicks, 1846

    Last month, headlines screamed that a Texas team of archaelogists
    believed they had possibly located the biblical boat in Iran.

    But hang on to the "Hallelujah!" chorus a little longer.

    There are numerous claims about the final resting place, from Ararat
    to Armenia. With modern technology and digital photography being
    utilized in the hunt, it seems like everyone is finding what they
    think is Noah's Ark.

    The Iran claim

    As WorldNetDaily reported June 30, a 14-man crew that included
    evangelical apologist Josh McDowell says it returned from a trek to
    a mountain in Iran with possible evidence of the remains of Noah's Ark.

    The group, led by explorer Bob Cornuke, found an unusual object
    perched on a slope 13,120 feet above sea level.

    Cornuke, president of the archeological Base Institute and a veteran
    of nearly 30 expeditions in search of Bible artifacts and locations,
    said he is cautiously, but enthusiastically, optimistic about the find.

    Some of the team's photos can be seen here.

    Also on the team were Barry Rand, former CEO of Avis; Boone Powell,
    former CEO of Baylor Medical Systems; and Arch Bonnema, president of
    Joshua Financial.

    The team returned with video footage of a large black formation,
    about 400 feet long - the approximate length of the ark, according
    to the Bible - that looks like rock but bears the image of hundreds
    of massive, wooden, hand-hewn beams.

    Bonnema observed: "These beams not only look like petrified wood, they
    are so impressive that they look like real wood - this is an amazing
    discovery that may be the oldest shipwreck in recorded history."

    The team said one piece of the blackened rock is "cut" at 90-degree
    angle.

    Even more intriguing, they said, some of the wood-like rocks tested
    this week proved to be petrified wood.

    It's noteworthy, they pointed out, that the Bible recounts Noah sealed
    his ark with pitch, a black substance.

    Mount Ararat

    Despite the hype, there are those who maintain the vessel is definitely
    on Mount Ararat, in present-day Turkey.

    Among them is Edward Crawford, a former draftsman illustrator for the
    U.S. military who now teaches Christian theology at Evergreen Bible
    Presbyterian Church in the Seattle suburb of Pullayup, Wash.

    Crawford has made numerous climbs up Ararat, and says in 1990, he
    discovered a large, rectangular structure buried in the ice at an
    elevation of 14,765 feet.

    "I don't have any doubt about it at all, and the Turks don't either,"
    he told WND.

    He says the structure currently sits under snow and ice, which he calls
    "ridiculously hard stuff," but he expects it will be at its highest
    point above the frozen water this summer, as forecasts call for an
    unusual warm-up.

    Crawford has put much of his discovery online at a website called
    Project von Bora, where photographs and diagrams are available,
    and he alleges the structure has 90-degree angles.

    Edward Crawford believes a rectangular Noah's Ark lies at this location
    on Mount Ararat (courtesy Edward Crawford)

    "Those don't happen in nature," he said. "If you think someone went
    up there to build that, it would take a greater miracle than the Flood
    [of Noah] itself."

    Crawford is now urging the Ankara government to formally acknowledge
    his find, and grant him permission to explore the site again this
    summer.

    "This is not a politically correct discovery," he said. "I never
    imagined that I would discover the structure and its disposition. I had
    no idea it would take this long to sort through the Turkish red tape."

    Not far from Crawford's "structure" on Mount Ararat is something which
    made headlines in March with the release of a new, high-resolution
    digital image of what has become known as the "Ararat Anomaly."

    Satellite image of 'Ararat Anomaly,' taken by DigitalGlobe's QuickBird
    Satellite in 2003 and now made public for the first time (courtesy:
    DigitalGlobe)

    The location of the anomaly on the mountain's northwest corner has
    been under investigation from afar by ark hunters for years, but it
    has remained unexplored, with the government of Turkey not granting
    any scientific expedition permission to explore on site.

    "I've got new found optimism ... as far as my continuing push to have
    the intelligence community declassify some of the more definitive-type
    imagery," Porcher Taylor, an associate professor in paralegal studies
    at the University of Richmond, said at the time.

    For more than three decades, Taylor has been a national security
    analyst, and has also served as a senior associate for five years at
    the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

    "I had no preconceived notions or agendas when I began this in 1993
    as to what I was looking for," he said. "I maintain that if it is
    the remains of something manmade and potentially nautical, then it's
    potentially something of biblical proportions."

    The anomaly remains ensconced in glacial ice at an altitude of 15,300
    feet, and Taylor says the photos suggest its length-to-width ratio
    is close to 6:1, as indicated in the Book of Genesis.

    The mountains of Ararat

    Some 15 miles from Mount Ararat is perhaps the most well-known
    candidate vying for the title of Noah's Ark.

    Many believe this is Noah's Ark, already found on a mountain next to
    Mt. Ararat (courtesy: wyattmuseum.com)

    A boat-shaped object thought by many to be the fossilized remnants of
    the the vessel sits in Dogubayazit, Turkey, and was first photographed
    in 1959 by a Turkish air force pilot on a NATO mapping mission.

    It gained worldwide attention after its photo was published in a 1960
    issue of Life Magazine.

    The man most responsible for promoting this location as the ark's
    actual resting place from the Bible was Ron Wyatt, who died of
    cancer in 1999 after years of searching for biblical antiquities,
    also claiming to have found the remains of Pharaoh's chariots that
    chased Moses through the Red Sea, and the "true" location of Mount
    Sinai in Arabia.

    In 2004, Wyatt's widow, Mary Nell Wyatt Lee, published a history of
    the discovery in a book titled, "The Boat-Shaped Object on Doomsday
    Mountain."

    She writes that on Dec. 12, 1987, "it was the official decision of
    members of [Turkey's] Ministry of Foreign Affairs, of Internal Affairs,
    and researchers from Ataturk University, among others, that the
    boat-shaped formation did indeed contain the remains of Noah's Ark!"

    An Associated Press story from that month read:

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- A group of Turkish researchers has decided that
    a boat-shaped formation found in 1977 on a hill in eastern Turkey
    is the remains of Noah's Ark, a Turkish tourism official says.
    Her Cornersville, Tenn.-based foundation, Wyatt Archaeological
    Research, is filled with on-location photographs and charts promoting
    its case with physical evidence including radar scans of bulkheads
    on the alleged vessel, deck timber and iron rivets, large "drogue"
    stones which are thought to have acted as types of anchors.

    However, there's been no shortage of critics from both scientific
    and Christian circles who think the Dogubayazit site is erroneous.

    Lorence Collins, a retired geology professor from California State
    University, Northridge, joined the late David Fasold, a one-time
    proponent of the Wyatt site, in writing a scientific summary claiming
    the location is "bogus."

    "Evidence from microscopic studies and photo analyses demonstrates
    that the supposed Ark near Dogubayazit is a completely natural
    rock formation," said the 1996 paper published in the Journal of
    Geoscience Education. "It cannot have been Noah's Ark nor even a
    man-made model. It is understandable why early investigators falsely
    identified it."

    The Armenian factor

    The final entrant is Leroy Blevins, a New Richmond, Ohio, man who
    carries a 1950 Catholic Press Bible which states the ark rested
    "upon the mountains of Armenia," leading him to believe the location
    of the vessel is indeed in the former Soviet republic.

    Is this Noah's Ark on Mt. Aragats in Armenia? (courtesy Leroy Blevins)

    Blevins offers little proof for his claim, except a series of photos on
    his website, as he purports the ark is situated on Armenia's highest
    point Mount Aragats, not to be confused with the similar sounding
    Ararat in Turkey.

    "No one has ever looked for Noah's Ark on this mountain in Armenia,"
    he told WND. "There is a rectangle-shaped boat on the top of this
    mountain. This boat has what appears to be either a vent or windows.
    You can see the whole outline of this ship and it is locked in the
    mountains. ... You can see that it is big and man-made."

    Joe Zias, a Jerusalem-based anthropologist who is a former curator
    at the Israel Antquities Authority, is quick to throw cold water on
    all these claims of the ark being discovered.

    "Just when I think I've seen it all, another group of nutters shows
    up," he told WND.

    Zias says the parties making the discovery claims are "pimping"
    off the Bible for money, suggesting they have no training in geology,
    archaeology or anthropology; nor any peer-reviewed articles, university
    appointments and "any credibility whatsoever in academic circles."

    "Aside from myself who follows this craziness, few if any in the
    profession have ever heard of them," he said.

    In both the Old and New Testaments, the Bible speaks of Noah and
    the ark, and Jesus Christ and the apostles Paul and Peter all make
    reference to Noah's flood as an actual historical event.

    According to Genesis, Noah was a righteous man who was instructed by
    God to construct a large vessel to hold his family and many species
    of animals, as a massive deluge was coming to purify the world which
    had become corrupt.

    Genesis 6:5 states: "And God saw that the wickedness of man was great
    in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart
    was only evil continually."

    Noah was told by God to take aboard seven pairs of each of the "clean"
    animals - that is to say, those permissible to eat - and two each of
    the "unclean" variety. (Gen. 7:2)

    Though the Bible says it rained for 40 days and 40 nights, it also
    mentions "the waters prevailed upon the earth a hundred and fifty
    days."

    The ark then "rested" upon the mountains of Ararat, but it was still
    months before Noah and his family - his wife, his three sons and
    the sons' wives - were able to leave the ark and begin replenishing
    the world.
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