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Archaeology & History

Researchers are planning to excavate rumored site of Noah's Ark

By T.K. Randall
April 9, 2025 · Comment icon 26 comments
The Durupinar site in Turkey.
Is this Noah's Ark ? Image Credit: CC BY-SA 4.0 Zorka Sojka
Turkey's Durupinar Formation is believed by many to be the petrified remains of Noah's biblical vessel.
Situated approximately 3km north of the Iranian border and around 6,500ft above sea level, the site - which for years has been hailed by some as the final resting place of the ark itself - could soon be at the center of a significant new archaeological excavation.

Researchers from California-based firm Noah's Ark Scans are hoping to prove once and for all that the Durupinar Formation really is the biblical vessel built by Noah at the time of the Old Testament.

"The location lies in an active earth flow with harsh winters, so protecting the area is our top priority," researcher Andrew Jones told The Sun.

"Over the next few years, our Turkish university partners will conduct non-destructive tests like soil sampling, radar scans, and other methods to determine if the structures we've detected are truly man-made or simply natural formations."

"Only after we gather enough evidence and have a proper preservation plan in place will we consider excavating."
Some experts are already convinced that the site really is the petrified remains of the ark.

Earlier this year, a new study found evidence to link the formation to the story of Noah in the form of clues indicating that the entire region was underwater at the time of the biblical Great Flood.

30 samples of soil and rock from the site were analyzed and determined to contain clay-like materials, marine deposits and even traces of small shellfish dating back around 3,500 - 5,000 years.

"Our studies show that this region harboured life in that period and that, at some point, it was covered by water, which reinforces the possibility that a catastrophic event of great magnitude occurred," the international team of researchers wrote at the time.

As things stand, however, there is still no "smoking gun" confirming that this really is Noah's Ark.

Source: Mail Online | Comments (26)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #17 Posted by Hammerclaw 19 days ago
Only if you're obsessed with peckers.
Comment icon #18 Posted by Hammerclaw 19 days ago
Looking for alternative sources of rare earths to negate dependency on China.
Comment icon #19 Posted by Hammerclaw 19 days ago
Don't you forget my unicorns!  
Comment icon #20 Posted by Tom1200 19 days ago
I think you're exaggerating a bit.  300,000 plants?  Well, I can only name twenty-two, so I don't believe you. Noah didn't need to take fish on board.  Durrr! fish literally love floods!  And amphibians, probably - they spend lots of their time in water.  They would survive a forty-day flood, maybe. And birds?  Birds can, like, fly.  ABOVE the food waters.  No problem there either.  Don't know too much about reptiles.  But crocodiles like water, also turtles, so there. Also lots of mammals love water, like whales and beavers and swimmers, so most of them don't need a ride.  Leaving ... [More]
Comment icon #21 Posted by Abramelin 19 days ago
Let's assume there was something like a flood. Maybe some saw it coming, and built a bigger boat than usual, and then they took as many people and lifestock onboard as was physically possible. It was probably not the size of a Titanic but larger than normal. Give a few thousand years and this 'fish' grew from 2 feet to a whale sized 200 feet.  
Comment icon #22 Posted by GAZUK 19 days ago
People must be f v c king stupid to give any money for this utter twaddle. I didn't believe this when I was a schoolboy in the early 80s and certainly haven't changed my opinion since....
Comment icon #23 Posted by Hammerclaw 19 days ago
Noah was just a variation of a classic Semitic creation myth.
Comment icon #24 Posted by HandsomeGorilla 19 days ago
Did they have those blue, hardcover children's Bible story books sitting on every table in doctor's and dentist's offices in the UK?  They were among my first introductions to the Bible at an early age. Also one of my first, "what the **** is this s***?" moments. 
Comment icon #25 Posted by GAZUK 19 days ago
I don't recall anything like that. Mostly copies of "Women's Realm' and 'Home and Gardens' about 10 years out of date....
Comment icon #26 Posted by Hammerclaw 19 days ago
I remember the dogeared old National Geographics as some kind of weird porn magazines.


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