Active Users:859 Time:22/12/2024 04:47:04 AM
this could be an amazing discovery! wads - 27/04/2004 07:17:51 AM

What a waste of money though. if they find it I will happily eat my words

Entrepreneur to fund Ark search


By Julia Duin
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


A Roman Catholic entrepreneur from Honolulu is funding a $900,000 expedition to find Noah's Ark this summer, after a record heat wave last year revealed what could be a large man-made object on the northeastern slopes of Turkey's Mount Ararat.

Daniel P. McGivern, 64, told reporters yesterday he was sending a team of 30 American and Turkish scientists, forensic specialists and archaeologists to the site, revealed in recent satellite photographs, in the hopes of fostering belief in God and a worldwide religious revival.

"The discovery of Noah's Ark [would be] the single greatest event since the resurrection of Jesus Christ," Mr. McGivern said, "and it — I know — will change the way science currently thinks about the Earth," in reference to the Bible's account of a global flood.

Mr. McGivern said he is interviewing potential team members for the expedition, which will be from July 15 to Aug. 15.

The northeastern slopes of the 16,854-foot mountain are treacherous and steep. The location of what the U.S. Air Force used to call the "Ararat anomaly" also contains 11 glaciers, hundreds of feet thick. The spot where Mr. McGivern said the ark may be is on a 45-degree slope.

Last summer's heat wave in Europe — thought to be the most extreme in 500 years — caused a record "melt back" of ice covering the object. Mr. McGivern asked Digital Globe, a Longmont, Colo., company that specializes in satellite imaging, to photograph the area in August and September.

The result, he said, are photos that show a definite dark patch in the middle of a glacier on the edge of the 800-foot-deep Ahora Gorge. A close-up of the patch shows what looks like three beams and a cross beam.

The leader of this summer's expedition, Ahmet Ali Arslan, who grew up in a village 12 miles from the summit, said he has climbed as close as 660 feet to the object, which until last summer was encased in an ice cap.

Mr. Arslan, a college professor at Selcuk University in Konya, Turkey, and a former correspondent for Voice of America, said he has climbed the mountain 50 times in 40 years.

According to biblical records, Noah's Ark would measure about 75 feet wide, 450 feet long and 45 feet high. Mr. McGivern estimates the boat had three decks, "and we expect that we'll find compartments and cages."

The object on the satellite image is at least 50 feet by 70 feet, he said. There is some speculation that the object, if it is the biblical ark, has broken into three pieces.

The account of the ark, which is in Genesis 6:9, places its construction about 6,000 years ago.

Tuluy Tanc, a spokesman for the Turkish Embassy, confirmed that Mr. McGivern's group met yesterday with Osman Faruk Logolu, the Turkish ambassador, who invited them to apply for permits to make the climb.

"If it's a serious excursion, I can't see much problem in getting them," he said.

Mr. McGivern, who headed the Hawaii Christian Coalition in 1998, owns a Honolulu-based marketing firm and said he has incorporated Shamrock — the Trinity Corp. in Delaware to fund projects such as this.






wads

Onwards the Aussie Spam Invasion!
TwoWongs rocks my world
campaiging for vitamin S
Quai Master is my muffin

the washington times




the washington times
View/create new replies Sign up for a premium account to add posts to a list of favourites!
this could be an amazing discovery! - 27/04/2004 07:17:51 AM 204 Views
Very interesting - 27/04/2004 07:20:40 AM 22 Views
indeed it is - 27/04/2004 07:22:58 AM 13 Views
Ah, but - 27/04/2004 07:25:14 AM 10 Views
well..... - 27/04/2004 07:28:09 AM 9 Views
More likely - 27/04/2004 07:29:28 AM 8 Views
umm.... - 27/04/2004 07:33:43 AM 7 Views
Could be - 27/04/2004 07:35:22 AM 8 Views
It would be cool if it... - 27/04/2004 08:14:53 AM 8 Views
It would if it did - 27/04/2004 08:17:07 AM 7 Views
well...... - 27/04/2004 08:36:18 AM 5 Views
Re: this could be an amazing discovery! - 27/04/2004 08:22:13 AM 12 Views
heh - 27/04/2004 08:37:29 AM 10 Views
it is amusing ... kind of - 27/04/2004 08:48:00 AM 8 Views
hey! - 27/04/2004 09:04:56 AM 6 Views
But - 27/04/2004 09:07:00 AM 4 Views
yes indeed - 27/04/2004 09:10:44 AM 4 Views
Exactly - 27/04/2004 09:12:48 AM 4 Views
indeed - 27/04/2004 09:19:00 AM 5 Views
And all we ask in return are a few points - 27/04/2004 09:20:53 AM 4 Views
*gets dizzy* - 27/04/2004 09:13:47 AM 5 Views
So, just hand us some points then get on with it - 27/04/2004 09:15:02 AM 3 Views
work? - 27/04/2004 09:17:36 AM 5 Views
Re: work? - 27/04/2004 09:27:50 AM 5 Views
butbut - 27/04/2004 10:57:31 AM 5 Views
- 27/04/2004 11:22:59 AM 5 Views
Don't worry - 27/04/2004 11:27:27 AM 6 Views
Wow. You posted something that wasn't spam. *NM* - 27/04/2004 10:10:04 AM 3 Views
it happens on occasion - 27/04/2004 11:00:59 AM 5 Views
It'd be nice if it was a man-made thingummy though. - 27/04/2004 12:38:58 PM 7 Views
Agreed. Waste of time. - 27/04/2004 02:02:18 PM 15 Views
shut your eyes, aero! shut your eyes! *NM* - 27/04/2004 03:16:29 PM 2 Views
a fool and his money.... - 27/04/2004 03:17:40 PM 5 Views
If they found Noah's ark, it would be more reason to curse god. - 27/04/2004 04:05:38 PM 8 Views
actually it wouldn't - 27/04/2004 08:37:50 PM 6 Views
Noah's Ark was made of wood - 27/04/2004 05:51:45 PM 8 Views
Like a witch *NM* - 27/04/2004 06:11:13 PM 4 Views
So if the Ark weighs the same as a duck............. *NM* - 27/04/2004 11:27:37 PM 3 Views
Then it is a duck! *NM* - 28/04/2004 12:44:17 AM 3 Views
And therefore....... *NM* - 29/04/2004 12:36:45 AM 2 Views
*remembers reading somewhere* - 28/04/2004 12:45:54 AM 4 Views