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Keyword: durupinarformation

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  • Buried Beneath the Mountains: Are We Closer Than Ever to Finding Noah’s Ark?

    04/23/2026 4:36:54 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 64 replies
    PNW ^ | 04/23/2026
    For centuries, skeptics have dismissed the account of Noah's Ark as allegory--an ancient story meant to convey moral truth rather than historical reality. But today, high in the rugged terrain of eastern Mount Ararat, a growing body of evidence is once again challenging that assumption. What was once the domain of speculation is now being probed by ground-penetrating radar, soil chemistry, and emerging technology. And the results, while still debated, are difficult to ignore. At the center of renewed interest is the so-called Durupinar formation, a boat-shaped geological structure first identified in 1959. For decades, it has fascinated researchers due...
  • Did Noah’s Ark really exist? Pottery fragments found near Biblical boat site provide evidence of human settlement

    12/28/2025 10:31:12 AM PST · by SaxxonWoods · 208 replies
    New York Post ^ | 12/27/2025 | Ben Cost
    Archaeologists might have discovered a major milestone in the quest to prove Noah’s Ark’s existence — pottery fragments near the supposed site of the Biblical boat. Prof. Dr Faruk Kaya of Agri Ibrahim Cecen University said the pieces were found close to the alleged Ark outline at the Dogubayazit site on Turkey’s Mount Ararat, according to Turkish media, the Daily Mail reported. The 538-foot-long boat-shaped geological structure has been the focal point of the Noah’s Ark debate for decades, having been described in the Bible as the legendary life raft’s final resting place.
  • Ancient Map Appears to Point to the Location of Noah’s Ark, Matching Recent Discoveries

    06/08/2026 9:37:43 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 46 replies
    basedunderground.com ^ | May 30, 2026 | Fernando Ehrenreich
    A 16th-century map has surfaced with striking implications. The massive Planisphere created by Italian cartographer Urbano Monte in 1587 appears to mark the final resting place of Noah’s Ark precisely where many researchers have long suspected it lies—in the mountains of Ararat region in modern-day Turkey. Independent researcher Jimmy Corsetti highlighted the alignment on social media, noting that Monte’s depiction of “Arca Noe” sits at the same location and matches the dimensions of the Durupinar Formation, a boat-shaped site that has drawn both fascination and controversy for decades. Far from mere coincidence, this cartographic detail adds another layer to mounting...
  • Has Noah's Ark been found? Boat-shaped mound in Turkey was underwater 5,000 years ago, scientists say - the same period as the Biblical flood

    03/10/2025 9:57:57 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 65 replies
    Daily Mail UK ^ | March 10, 2025 | Staff
    According to the Bible, Noah's Ark saved humanity and all the animals from certain annihilation during an ancient flood. Now, 5,000 years after those floodwaters supposedly receded, scientists claim to have discovered the location of the famous boat. An international team of researchers claims that a boat-shaped mound 18 miles (30km) south of Mount Ararat in Turkey is actually the fossilised remains of a wooden vessel. The Durupinar Formation is a 163-metre (538ft) geological structure made of a type of iron ore called limonite. It has long captivated researchers due to the fact that its shape and structure almost match...
  • Samples from ‘Noah’s Ark’ site in Turkey reveal human activity dating back to biblical era, scientists claim

    10/28/2023 9:31:40 AM PDT · by logi_cal869 · 75 replies
    NY Post via MSN ^ | 10/28/2023 | Nicholas McEntyre
    It may just be a discovery of biblical proportions. Scientists have placed humans at the site of what is believed to be the “ruins of Noah’s Ark,” in the eastern mountains of Turkey. The findings, released earlier this week, of rock and soil samples determined that “clayey materials, marine materials and seafood” were present in the area between 5500 and 3000 BC, according to the Turkish newspaper Hürriyet. The study is comprised of three Turkish and American universities that have been investigating the theory of the site since 2021. The “Mount Ararat and Noah’s Ark Research Team” group was created...