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Noah's Ark Makes Waves: Doubts Are Raised Over A Claim That The Bibl

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  • Noah's Ark Makes Waves: Doubts Are Raised Over A Claim That The Bibl

    NOAH'S ARK MAKES WAVES; DOUBTS ARE RAISED OVER A CLAIM THAT THE BIBLICAL SHIP HAS BEEN FOUND IN TURKEY
    by Chris Taylor

    South China Morning Post
    May 10, 2010 Monday
    Hong Kong

    News that a Christian group based in Hong Kong may have discovered
    the biblical Noah's Ark in Turkey is making headlines around the world.

    The announcement has also prompted Turkey's Ministry of Culture and
    Tourism to investigate how parts of the alleged find ended up in
    Hong Kong.

    Explorers from Noah's Ark Ministries International said they had found
    wood and compartments that could have housed animals that were believed
    to have been saved from the global flood narrated in the Bible.

    They said they were "99.9 per cent sure" that they had finally located
    the legendary boat, about 4,200 metres up Mount Ararat in eastern
    Turkey. The evangelist group said carbon dating had proved wood from
    the site was 4,800 years old.

    The group also raised eyebrows when it made the same announcement
    in 2008.

    One of the sceptics, archaeologist Peter Kuniholm, said of the latest
    finding: "There's not enough H2O in the world to get an ark that high
    up a mountain."

    More damaging still, an e-mail by evangelist and Ark researcher Dr
    Randall Price was leaked to the PaleoBabble website, in which he
    describes the discovery as a hoax.

    Price says he was the archaeologist in the 2008 trip, a claim that
    one of the expedition members, Yeung Wing-cheung, has confirmed to
    Young Post.

    Price's e-mail details how the expedition's Turkish guide had beams
    of wood moved from "the Black Sea area" - where he says the original
    2008 ark pictures were taken - up the mountain and put in a cave.

    He says in the e-mail: "I and my partners invested US$100,000 in this
    expedition ... which they have retained, despite their promise and
    our requests to return it, since it was not used for the expedition."

    Price elaborated on his leaked e-mail last Tuesday on the World of
    the Bible Ministries website. He said: "In Dogubabyazit, the village
    at the foot of Mount Ararat, where Parasut, the Chinese guide, is
    well known, the locals know that the true story that the structure
    in the cave is a grand hoax."

    He quoted from an alleged e-mail from one of the villagers, saying
    Parasut had been putting "wood in the cave ... for money" for three
    years.

    Yeung denied the claim, pointing out that road access on Ararat only
    went up to 2,000 metres and it was "physically impossible to carry
    such a large structure" up 4,200 metres.

    "Everyone who has ever climbed Mount Ararat would know the terrain
    above 3,800 metres is so rugged that you cannot carry anything more
    than a backpack," the group said on its website.

    Yeung also defended the team's use of the US$100,000 "investment",
    saying part of the money had gone to local mountaineers who filmed
    video to prove to Price that the 2008 expedition could be not be
    undertaken due to bad weather.

    Meanwhile, scientists who were not involved in either expedition were
    sceptical for other reasons.

    Paul Zimansky, an archaeologist at Stony Brook University in New
    York State, said that he would want to see evidence of a particularly
    catastrophic flood in Turkey 4,800 years ago. "We know what was going
    on with Turkey archaeologically at that time, and there was no major
    interruption in the culture," he said.

    Other scholars doubted whether Noah's Ark - if it was not merely a
    biblical myth - actually came to rest on Mount Ararat.

    "The whole notion is odd, because the Bible tells you the ark landed
    somewhere in Urartu," biblical scholar Jack Sasson said, referring
    to an ancient kingdom in the Armenian highlands. "It's only later
    that people identified Mount Ararat with Urartu."

    Ark hunter Bob Cornuke, of the Bible Archaeology, Search and
    Exploration Institute, said the ark landed in the Alborz mountains,
    in what is now northern Iran.

    Not that any of this is likely to deter future expeditions and
    "discoveries", which have been taking place since the early 1820s,
    as Zimansky said ironically in an interview with National Geographic:
    "I don't know of any expedition that ever went looking for the ark
    and didn't find it."
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