Noah's Ark discovered on Mr. Ararat
Scientific PROOF
On the 11th September 1959, whilst studying around 10000 aerial photographs Captain Ilhan Durupinar from the Turkish army, noticed an object which was shaped like an Ark in a photograph which had been taken from above the Ararat Mountains in eastern Turkey (Fig. 1). He believed that the shape of the object could not have been formed by nature and after calculating the length and the width he concluded that the ark shape was possibly the remains of Noah’s ark. The location and the dimensions all matched those of the Ark.
As a result, an expedition was sent into the Ararat Mountains the following year and the boat shaped object which had been identified in the aerial photograph was located. The report of their findings was later published in Life magazine on the 5th September 1960.
Having read the Life Magazine article in 1960, Ronald E. Wyatt, an anesthetist from Tennessee, believed that the site required further investigation. During the 1980’s Ron Wyatt succeeded in scanning the structure with the use of ground penetrating radar and other equipment.
Even although the penetration depth of radar is limited, the data from these scans revealed what appeared to be vertical wall structures within the hull shape, with a symmetry and layout that Ron Wyatt believed was characteristic of a man-made object. (Fig. 2 and 3).