An 1883 Turkish expedition found Noah's Ark
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Contents |
Claim
In 1883, a Turkish commission surveying Ararat for possible avalanche conditions found part of the Ark protruding 20 or 30 feet from the foot of a glacier, according to the British newspaper Prophetic Messenger.
Source
- LaHaye, Tim & Morris, John, 1976. The Ark on Ararat, Thomas Nelson Inc. and Creation Life Publishers, Nashville and New York, pp. 56-58.
Responses
- Where are the records and pictures from this expedition?
- add more responses
Fallacies contained in this claim
- Inconsistency (forest, wood)
References
- Bailey, Lloyd R., 1989. Noah: The Person and the Story in History and Tradition, University of South Carolina Press, p. 85.
Related claims
- Noah's Ark has been found
- We can expect to find Noah's Ark on Mt. Ararat
- Noah's Ark may have been photographed on Ararat in 1949
- ERTS satellite photographed Noah's Ark in 1973
- Noah's Ark has been found near Dogubayazit, Turkey
- Anchor stones of Noah's Ark have been found
- The Turkish government officially recognized the site of Noah's Ark
- James Bryce found a 4-foot timber high on Ararat
- Navarra retrieved hand-hewn wood from high on Ararat
- Hardwicke Knight found soft wood timbers on Ararat
- Yearam guided 3 vile scientists to Noah's Ark in 1916
- Prince Nouri of Baghdad found the Ark in 1887
- Hagopian visited the Ark with his uncle around 1908
- Russian aviator Roskovitsky photographed the Ark
- Resit, a Kurdish farmer, found the Ark in 1948

