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Is This The Real Noah's Ark, Found At Last? The Mystery Of The "Ararat Anomaly"
TooGood Reports ^ | 4/15/02 | Isaiah Flair

Posted on 04/16/2002 12:12:59 PM PDT by Good Tidings Of Great Joy

It may be exactly what millions of people believe that it is. If so, it is the greatest archaeological find in centuries.

Its official name is "The Ararat Anomaly".

An independent correlation of maps of the region with information released in 1995 by the United States Defense Intelligence Agency places the Ararat Anomaly at "approximately 39 42' 10" N 044 16' 30" E at an elevation of approximately 14-15,000 feet and approximately 2.2 KM horizontal distance west of the summit".

It is located by the Ahora Gorge, near the summit of Mt. Ararat, in Turkey. Turkey, in turn, is bordered by the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea.

The October 2001 American Journal of Archaeology attested to massive flooding in the region 7,500 years ago, noting that the Black Sea was "abruptly filled by waters from the Mediterranean when the Bosporus was cut by rising world sea levels."

Mt. Ararat itself is of volcanic origin, glaciated and covered with ice and loose rocks. Expeditions, while not impossible, are dangerous due to frequent avalanches. Indeed, an avalanche in 1840 destroyed a 500-year-old monastery, which had in turn preserved many of the artifacts that had been discovered in the area.

The weather is also treacherous. Mt. Ararat is a magnet for thunderstorms. The resulting inclement weather often impedes progress towards the summit. On the other hand, locals say that the storms result in beautiful rainbows.

Kurdish rebels tend to shoot at foreigners seeking to explore Mt. Ararat, a not-unimportant fact which has dissuaded many from pursuing the facts about whatever it is up there.

On June 17, 1949, a United States Air Force plane flew a then-classified aerial photographic mission over Mt. Ararat. The pilot, to his surprise, recorded two images of the Ararat Anomaly — a linear, oddly symmetrical shape approximately 600 feet in length, with roughly 90 feet of that length protruding clearly from out of the snow and ice.

Whatever it was appeared to be damaged.

The pilot also recorded three pictures of a second anomaly, smaller, and similar in shape, nearby. It was speculated that something had been split in half, or more exactly into a 2/3 part and a 1/3 part by one or more of Mt. Ararat´s frequent avalanches. The smaller part may have, according to more recent United States Government satellite images of the Ararat Anomaly, slipped into the Ahora Gorge.

The Ahora Gorge is a full mile wide, and reportedly miles deep. It may hold quite a few answers.

These findings were accentuated by the pictures taken between October of 1999 and the summer of 2000 by the Ikonos 2 Satellite, which resolves images as small as one meter across.

From the 1949 pictures, per the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) analysis thereof released in 1995, there are from the front of the surviving 2/3, now known as the Ararat Anomaly, three giant, prong-like structures, akin to what might be found in an ancient marine vessel. Similar structures were similarly identified in images of the smaller anomaly, the 1/3 of the original that may be lost to the depths of the Ahora Gorge.

Nearby, on Parrot Glacier, French explorer Fernand Navarra found a five-foot long piece of carefully hand-crafted wood.

Published reports confirm that the hand-crafted piece of wood found by Navarra was submitted to the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, France, the Forestry Institute of Research and Experiments of the Ministry of Agriculture in Madrid, Spain and the Department of Anthropology and Prehistoric Studies at the University of Bordeaux in France.

The age of the hand-crafted piece of wood was determined to be in excess of 5,000 years old.

The site where it was found was only a few hundred meters from the site of the 1949 U.S. Air Force pictures.

However, Navarra was unaware of those pictures when he submitted his discovery: those pictures remained classified until 1982. Navarra independently made his discovery in the same area on July 5, 1955.

And then, finally, there is the interesting report of proto-Sumerian pictographs found on a rock from a cave near Mt. Ararat´s Ahora Gorge, as reported in the National Geographic Society's publication, Research & Exploration, Vol. 10, No. 4, 1994, p. 484.

The pictographs refer to the covenant of the bright bow and add "let man and woman go forth and procreate".

The pictographs, collectively, are known as the "Ahora Covenant Inscription".

Notwithstanding all of that... the central question, of course, is whether what has been officially recognized as "The Ararat Anomaly" is — or was — a boat.

More specifically, a very, very ancient boat which set forth thousands of years ago, through torrential rains, into the deepening water of a great deluge, alighting on dry land after forty days and forty nights...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: ark; bible; boats; catastrophism; christianity; crevolist; defensedepartment; facts; faith; godsgravesglyphs; history; middleeast; mountains; mysteries; noah; noahsark; religio
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To: tortoise
I have always been intrigued by the number of people, language and country names in the area that have a phonetic similarity to the name Ararat: Ur(of the Chaldees), Iraq, Iran, Arabia, Armenia, Urdu, Aram(Syria), Arad, Arcadia, and of course Aryan. There are many more. I don't know if this is a racial memory associated with Ararat or if it is just a popular phoneme. Of course Ireland, Argentina, and Uraguay just confuse the issue!
41 posted on 04/16/2002 1:47:40 PM PDT by limitedgov
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Comment #42 Removed by Moderator

To: Okiegolddust
Don't leave your cake out in the rain!
43 posted on 04/16/2002 2:24:44 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: Good Tidings Of Great Joy
I can't help but think any ark would have been scavenged for parts long ago. Those cut timbers would have come in handy to the first couple of generations out of the ark.
44 posted on 04/16/2002 3:13:45 PM PDT by Ahban
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To: RightWhale;LostTribe;Good Tidings Of Great Joy;RikaStrom
"The flooding of Euxine Lake may have been impressive, but would it splash a boat 2.5 miles up onto the side of a mountain?"

Not a chance. Let's go from another angle. If the Mediterranean Ocean was blocked at Gilbraltar during the Ice Age it would have likely dried out quite a bit and have had a greatly reduced water level for perhaps thousands of years.(Many communities/cities would have been built on the shore line). If and when the water broke through the 'plug' at Gilbralter (there is scouring on the ocean flood to support this idea) it would have begun a slow flooding of the coastal communities of the Mediterranean ocean.
There would have been thousands (maybe millions) of refugees streaming all over the place escaping their flooded coastal cities.
Word would have reached Noah that the whole world was flooding. At some point, the plug at the Bosporus would have blown and began to create even more panic and refugees and certainly confirmed the reports and rumors of a catastrophic flood.

Noah, in his wisdom, could see that the Black Sea was rising at one foot per day and probably estimated the height at which he had to begin to build the Ark (big, big,ship) so that he could complete it before the rising water reached the building site.....and that's why it's way up on the mountain. The water never reached it because the Black Sea and the Mediterranean reached equilibrium with the waters of the worlds oceans.

Another possibility is that Noah could have started building the Ark when reports of flooding in the Mediterranean began to arrive. The flooding of the Mediterranean could/would have changed weather/climate patterns and created the 'forty days and forty nights' of rain story recorded in the bible and an explanation for all the flooding that was apparent.

45 posted on 04/16/2002 3:16:30 PM PDT by blam
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To: RikaStrom
"The possibility in that region is supposed to be fairly high for that sort of activity, avalanche/earthquake stuff."

I would think that the higher up, the less the avalanche activity just because it would be colder. I'm thinking that the seasonal margins would see the most activity.

46 posted on 04/16/2002 3:27:19 PM PDT by blam
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To: Junior
If it's Noah's ark, I'll eat my hat.

This one? Watch out. It's spicy. But if not spicy enough for you, you can add this:

Bon apitite!

47 posted on 04/16/2002 3:35:56 PM PDT by mc5cents
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To: RikaStrom
I am more than slightly curious...and the fact that that area is known for it's brilliant rainbows is awe inspiring to me.
48 posted on 04/16/2002 3:48:34 PM PDT by ruoflaw
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Comment #49 Removed by Moderator

Comment #50 Removed by Moderator

Comment #51 Removed by Moderator

To: lexcorp
Did I ever tell you about the idea that the flood occurred on another planet, probably Mars, a long, long time ago, and the Ark was an interplanetary ship carrying the survivors to earth?
52 posted on 04/16/2002 4:24:00 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: lexcorp
As a Christian I don't believe the Ark was a fable at all but I also don't think there is much chance of any of it still surviving. So what? Christianity is based on faith and although having the ark around would be great, not having it doesn't have any effect on Christian faith in God and His Word.

I firmly believe that even if the remains of Noah's Ark were discovered and proven beyondf a shadow of a doubt to be authentic, no atheist or agnostic would change their mind. Not one. You either have faith - or you don't. Physical proof of one bible account, important as it is, would not sway those who wish to reject God, Christ and the bible. It would be argued about for centuries and the 'O.J. defense' would probably dominate.

Yes, the ark is real and thousands of years old but how we know it's THE ark in the bible? Maybe it's some OTHER ark from a later time....and so on, until the Lord's coming. Let it go, folks.

53 posted on 04/16/2002 4:38:12 PM PDT by Jim Scott
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To: lexcorp
you may be a rocket builder or even a rocket scientist but you don't know squat about archaelolgy...do you?
54 posted on 04/16/2002 4:43:45 PM PDT by ruoflaw
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To: blam
Hey blam!, remember the frozen man found on a mountain... how many years old was he?...he was in excellent shape.
55 posted on 04/16/2002 4:45:24 PM PDT by ruoflaw
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To: ruoflaw
he was in excellent shape.

Except for the arrow through the lung and the fact that he was dead, he was in good health generally.

56 posted on 04/16/2002 4:47:13 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: lexcorp
"More likely is that the Noah fable is simply a retelling of earlier flood stories (such as in Gilgamesh), with the old serial numbers scraped off."

The Gilgamesh story was the same Black Sea flood story.( told by two different groups of people) It is informative to know that the whole area at this time was very arid except right along the coast of this freshwater lake. When it was flooded with saltwater, this created thousands/millions(?)of refugees who fled in all directions and especially up the river valleys and on into Mesopatania(sp). Some think these refugees are the carriers of agriculture all over Europe. Also, linguists have traced the origins of all Indo-European languages to this region. This was a traumatic and memorable time for many, many people.

57 posted on 04/16/2002 4:47:48 PM PDT by blam
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To: lexcorp
Never pass up a simpler solution, son.

I was pointing out the obvious problems with the assumption that the site on Mt. Ararat was a likely candidate for being the resting place of the biblical ark; it is clearly a poor candidate (at least as far as finding any evidence is concerned). I'm pretty agnostic about the whole thing, and tend to go with the Gilgamesh plagerism theory as being the most probable.

58 posted on 04/16/2002 4:56:32 PM PDT by tortoise
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To: ruoflaw
"Hey blam!, remember the frozen man found on a mountain... how many years old was he?...he was in excellent shape."

Noah's Flood was a couple thousand years before the Iceman. (He may have been a descendent of some of the refugees?)

Oetzi, The Iceman

59 posted on 04/16/2002 4:58:57 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
>The Gilgamesh story was the same [ ... ] flood story.( told by two different groups of people)

Yep, I think so too.

60 posted on 04/16/2002 5:00:14 PM PDT by LostTribe
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