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Noah's Ark Found?

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Originally posted by: TripleAAA
Originally posted by: AbAbber2k
Originally posted by: JohnAn2112
Find an article written by CNN or an other reputable site. Then I'll believe it.

FYI: I'm a Christian and I don't believe this POS site.

:thumbsup:


Wow I can kill two birds with one stone on this one.

REPOST and MY OP TO CNN ARTICLE

Wrong..
The article on CNN talks about Mt. Arrarat in Turkey, on the other hand the article posted by the OP states that:
"In the 1980?s Cornuke participated with Irwin in several searches on Mount Ararat in Turkey but was disappointed with the results. After several years of frustrating expeditions, Cornuke started looking elsewhere for the ark. Cornuke found clues in the Bible that the ark might be on a mountain other than the famed Mount Ararat of Turkey."

 
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

More than one religion? You mean Judaism, Christianity, and Islam? Um... you do know they are all based on the same basic texts, right? They are all Abrahamic religions.
 
http://cbs11tv.com/topstories/local_story_177234625.html

http://www.kltv.com/Global/story.asp?S=5089327

http://www.kfmb.com/stories/story.55126.html

The team returned to the U.S. from rugged mountains in Iran with astonishing video footage of a monstrous black formation which looks like rock but bears the amazing image of hundreds of massive, wooden, hand-hewn beams. Could it be the lost ark on which two of every animal once sailed with their human rescuer?



Bob Cornuke, president of the BASE Institute, is a veteran of nearly 30 expeditions looking for yet-to-be-discovered locations and artifacts described by the Bible. He is cautiously?but enthusiastically?optimistic about the find: ?We have no way of confirming for sure that this object is Noah?s Ark, but it is probably the most interesting and baffling object ever found by ark searchers...it sure gets my heart to pumping just thinking of what it could be.?



The arkish object is about 400 feet long and consists of rocks that look remarkably like blackened wood beams while other rock in the area is distinctively brown. And one visible piece is ?cut? at 90-degree angle. Even more intriguing, some of the wood-like rocks were tested just this week and actually proved to be petrified wood, and it is noteworthy that Scripture recounts Noah sealed his ark with pitch?a decidedly black substance. Upon being cut open, one of these ?rocks? also divulged a marine fossil that could have only originated undersea.



Scouring the mountains all around the object, team participant Steve Crampton found thousands of fossilized sea shells blanketing the landscape. Cornuke brought back a one inch thick rock slab choked with fossilized clams.



High above the ark suspect, the team also found wood splinters and broken pottery shards under snow and rock at the 15,300 foot level. It showed evidence that ancients had thought this an important worship site for hundreds?if not thousands?of years. The landing location would also be an unusually hospitable place to live. The team notes that every ecosystem helpful to humans and the animals is reachable within a 25-mile radius of the ark?s location.



Cornuke initially got involved in the search for the ark after meeting Apollo 15, moon walking astronaut Jim Irwin. In the 1980s Cornuke participated with Irwin in several searches on Mount Ararat in Turkey but was disappointed with the results. After several years of frustrating expeditions, Cornuke started looking elsewhere for the ark.



Cornuke found clues in the Bible that the ark might be on a mountain other than the famed Mount Ararat of Turkey. His observation was based on the Genesis 11 account that says descendants of Noah came to the Mesopotamian valley from the east. According to Cornuke, that would put the Biblical mountains of Ararat somewhere in the northern reaches of Iran. He also cited ancient historians such as Nicholas of Damascus and Flavius Josephus who wrote just before and after Christ that timbers of the ark had survived in what would today be the higher mountains of Iran.



Although his research is by far the most definitive ever, Dr. Cornuke is not the first to suggest Noah?s Ark came to rest in Iran rather than Turkey. In 1943 an army observer named Ed Davis said he saw the ark on a high mountain in Iran. Sergeant Davis was a road construction engineer in Iran during World War II, building army highways from the Persian Gulf to the Caspian Sea. During his tour of duty there, some Iranian friends told Davis of the ark and led him to the site. After the war, Sgt. Davis passed a lie detector test affirming his testimony about actually seeing timbers from an ark-like object high in the mountains of Iran.



Before his death, Davis became acquainted with Bob Cornuke and gave him a map showing the way to the object. ?It was right where Ed said it was in his map,? Cornuke relayed, ?After seeing it from a distance I thought it at first unimpressive, but once we stood on the object we were all amazed at how it looked just like a huge pile of black and brown stone beams.?
 
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
Isn't this about the 100,967th thread on this?
Fairy tales never cease.


some people wouldnt believe even if they were handed proof on a platinum platter.
IMHO... athiest fundys are no better than the christian ones.
 
Even if it wasn't Noah's Ark, it's still a pretty impressive find. The petrified wood of a shipwreck, with marine fossils scattered around? This is still a great scientific find.
 
Led by explorer, adventurer, and featured Worldview Weekend speaker Dr. Bob Cornuke, a fourteen man crew returned this week from Iran bearing stunning evidence that theirs is the long-anticipated even coveted discovery of the remains of Noah?s Ark. Bob?s team consisted of a Who?s Who of business, law, and ministry leaders including Barry Rand (former CEO of Avis), the author and Christian apologist Josh McDowell, Frank Turek (co-author with Norm Geisler of I Don?t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist), Boone Powell (former CEO of Baylor Medical Systems), and Arch Bonnema (president of Joshua Financial).

And not one freaking archeologist. Only an idiot would believe that article. "Gee, a bunch of christians with no archeological or anthropological credentials who want to find corroberation for biblical stories found some rocks that look like petrified wood on top of a mountain in iran... NOAHS ARK!!!" :roll:
 
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

I think it is a definite possibility. A lot of religious Judeo-Christian sites has been witnessed in Iran, sadly there is a lot of beraucracy in searching for them there.
 
Originally posted by: [/b]kogase[/b]
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

More than one religion? You mean Judaism, Christianity, and Islam? Um... you do know they are all based on the same basic texts, right? They are all Abrahamic religions.

also something similar (great flood, big boat...) is mentioned in the epic of gilgamesh the first written work so there probably is an 'ark' of some sort laying around somewhere 🙂

nvm... didn't read the article 😱
 
Originally posted by: Aflac
Even if it wasn't Noah's Ark, it's still a pretty impressive find. The petrified wood of a shipwreck, with marine fossils scattered around? This is still a great scientific find.

Marine fossils? lol, so it means the mountain was created by plate techtonics and the land that was pushed up.
Check out the Burgess Shale in the Canadian Rocky mountains, it's no where land and full of marine life fossils.
 
Originally posted by: deepred98
Originally posted by: [/b]kogase[/b]
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

More than one religion? You mean Judaism, Christianity, and Islam? Um... you do know they are all based on the same basic texts, right? They are all Abrahamic religions.

also something similar (great flood, big boat...) is mentioned in the epic of gilgamesh the first written work so there probably is an 'ark' of some sort laying around somewhere 🙂

nvm... didn't read the article 😱

QFT.... Actually even Asian countries had great flood stories.
 
Well I'd be happy if they found something of that nature.

Looks like it might be something, only issue is that there's no way to prove or disprove it being the actual ark rather than just some old ship remains.

 
Originally posted by: DaShen
Originally posted by: deepred98
Originally posted by: [/b]kogase[/b]
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

More than one religion? You mean Judaism, Christianity, and Islam? Um... you do know they are all based on the same basic texts, right? They are all Abrahamic religions.

also something similar (great flood, big boat...) is mentioned in the epic of gilgamesh the first written work so there probably is an 'ark' of some sort laying around somewhere 🙂

nvm... didn't read the article 😱

QFT.... Actually even Asian countries had great flood stories.

You do realize that myths reference real events, but totally change the specifics, right? There was a big flood that wiped out the semetic villages in black sea area, but there wasn't a big boat with all the worlds animals on it. Giglamesh doesn't contain a reference to the ark, period.
 
Originally posted by: lokiju
Well I'd be happy if they found something of that nature.

Looks like it might be something, only issue is that there's no way to prove or disprove it being the actual ark rather than just some old ship remains.

They have no evidence that it is the remains of a ship. these people are amateurs with no formal training in excavation. I just hope they didn't ruin that site.
 
Originally posted by: preslove
Originally posted by: DaShen
Originally posted by: deepred98
Originally posted by: [/b]kogase[/b]
Originally posted by: Rage187
since more then one religon references it, yeah I think it existed in some form. Whether this is it is another story.

More than one religion? You mean Judaism, Christianity, and Islam? Um... you do know they are all based on the same basic texts, right? They are all Abrahamic religions.

also something similar (great flood, big boat...) is mentioned in the epic of gilgamesh the first written work so there probably is an 'ark' of some sort laying around somewhere 🙂

nvm... didn't read the article 😱

QFT.... Actually even Asian countries had great flood stories.

You do realize that myths reference real events, but totally change the specifics, right? There was a big flood that wiped out the semetic villages in black sea area, but there wasn't a big boat with all the worlds animals on it. Giglamesh doesn't contain a reference to the ark, period.

yes it may be true that gilgamesh doesn't mention the ark but gilgamesh is also a work of fiction and using fiction to prove ar disprove other fictions doesn't make any sense.
i just figured that if there was a big flood then someone would have had the brains to build a boat 😀

yeah dashen i think the ancient indian (mohenjo-dara, harrappa... i think) civs were destroyed by floods (hmm... or maybe droughts cuz they cut down all the trees for fuel which caused the indus to shift course... dunno)
 
Originally posted by: JohnAn2112
Find an article written by CNN or an other reputable site. Then I'll believe it.

FYI: I'm a Christian and I don't believe this POS site.

word up brother, i'm christian too and the whole noah's ark thing is BS.
 
Originally posted by: Juno
Originally posted by: JohnAn2112
Find an article written by CNN or an other reputable site. Then I'll believe it.

FYI: I'm a Christian and I don't believe this POS site.

word up brother, i'm christian too and the whole noah's ark thing is BS.


Apparently someone didnt read the whole thread... theres 3 other sources listed.
 
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