What do you mean,
"... but no one is seeing it." ?
It's been seen, filmed, studied, and documented.
In my opinion, Jewish atheist Dr Irving Finkel created this "FAKE" tablet to make fun of the religion he despises.
From the article
The tablet that altered the story of Noah's Ark:
" The story of Noahs Ark has always captivated the minds of children. Many have walked animal miniatures two-by-two into toy boats, as they imagine the vessel that saved believers from 40 rainy days and nights of flood.
But it is a story that does not hold water with Dr Irving Finkel, the British Museum curator in charge of cuneiform inscriptions on tablets of clay from ancient Mesopotamia. Dr Finkel has decoded a 4,000-year-old terracotta-coloured tablet that purports to give the exact measurements of the Ark long before the biblical account was written.
This ark is circular, like a coracle boat, takes up half a football pitch and is enclosed in a length of rope that would reach from London to Edinburgh. It didnt have to go in any direction, it just had to float and survive the flood, he says pointing to the cuneiform marks, as if I was able to read the ancient language.
...Finkel, who describes himself as a Jewish atheist, says he does not believe the Ark existed, despite remains apparently being found at Mount Ararat in Turkey. He believes that the Judeans, taken to Babylon by King Nebuchadnezzar II, incorporated Babylonian mythology into the Torah, but gave the stories a new, moral dimension. ... "
Check out
Noah's Ark" has been found in Turkey, April 27, 2010.
Click on the photos below.
Noah's Ark found in turkey ( 4:56 )
Uploaded on Apr 28, 2010
" The remains of Noah's Ark have been found 12,000ft up a Turkish mountain, it was claimed today.
A group of Chinese and Turkish evangelical explorers say carbon testing on remains found on Mount Ararat show they are 4,800 years old, around the time when the ark was said to be afloat.
But the group left themselves open to a critical backlash after they failed to reveal the location of their find or produce photographs of the exterior of the site.
The search for the physical remains of Noah's Ark has held a fascination for Christians, Jews and Muslims for hundreds of years. But despite various claims no scientific evidence has ever been found.
The team of 15 made the announcement of their find yesterday. They brought back from the site wooden remains and strands of rope which they believe was used for keeping animals.
Yeung Wing-cheung, a documentary filmmaker and member of the team from Hong Kong-based Noah's Ark Ministries International, said:'It's not 100 per cent that it is Noah's Ark but we think it is 99.9 per cent that this is it.'
He said the structure had several compartments, some with wooden beams, which were believed to house animals. However early indications are it was a kind of cypress wood whereas the Bible says it was made of gopher wood.
Members of the Chinese team appeared with Turkish officials at a joint press conference on the evangelicals website where the potential importance of the discovery was hailed.
... "
Also, this one:
You might be interested in the
Hagopian-Lee to Simmons-Arslan 1989 Photo Near Mt. Ararat Strato-Volcano Summit or the old Armenian, George Hagopian's story on pages 73 through 92 of
Secrets of the Lost Races: New Discoveries of Advanced Technology in Ancient Civilizations .
This one is worth your time.
Noah's Ark, a Milestone in History ( 17:13 )
Published on Mar 19, 2014
A Mile-stone; History was made in the fact that for the first time in history the discovery of the prehistoric sites, burried in a lakebed of a glacier on Mt. Ararat in Turkey,
has been presented before the archaeological world by a scientist in their own scientific language at the ASOR 2013 Annual Meeting, November 20 - 23, Baltimore, U.S.A.
E-mail: arkinsight@gmail.com
> In my opinion, Jewish atheist Dr Irving Finkel created this “FAKE” tablet to make fun of the religion he despises.
Your opinion is wrong, the tablet is authentic.
The problem with Finkel’s approach is similar to the problem of those who attribute a single origin to every flood story (some of which are tsunami stories) and claim that they refer to and support the Old Testament flood — they don’t.
Finkel (and Ryan and Pitman, authors of “Noah’s Flood”, and many others) correctly view the written Sumerian flood story “The Epic of Gilgamesh” as being the oldest written flood story in existence. While there are a few superficial similarities — world flooded, bunch of people died — they each tell a flood story from a geographical (and/or temporal) point of view. There’s no compelling reason to claim that the Noah version, uniquely among all the dozens of flood stories worldwide, was derived from Gilgamesh’.
That Chinese-Turkish expedition was either “had” by some local scam artists (the scammers even spread straw around, but didn’t leave the tools used to remove manure, or better yet, the last manure piles left while the critters were disembarking) or is a deliberate hoax by them. There are perhaps dozens of topics that were spammed onto FR back at that time.
As far as the alleged radiocarbon dating is concerned, where was the dating performed? What was dated? Who collected the samples and what was the chain of custody? And what about the Young-Earther claim that radiocarbon dating doesn’t work that close to 4004 BC?