This is exactly what we predicted. The real site is most probably the Dogubayazit site. The Bible NEVER says Noah's Arl landed on My Ararat, but in the MOUNTAINS (plural) of the Ararat region.

By Joe
Kovacs

© 2010 WorldNetDaily

Has the real Noah's Ark spoken of in the Bible truly been found?

At least two seasoned archaeologists who have made numerous
expeditions to Mount Ararat in search of Noah's Ark are throwing cold
water on this week's claim the Old Testament vessel has finally been
discovered, saying it's a hoax involving wood hauled in from the Black
Sea region.


In this photo from Noah's
Ark Ministries International, an explorer is purported to be
investigating a wooden structure on Mount Ararat in eastern Turkey that
it says may be the remnant of Noah's Ark mentioned in the Bible.

"To make a long story short: this is all reported to be a fake," said
Randall Price,
director of Judaic Studies at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va.

"This is not Noah's Ark," adds Bob Cornuke of the Bible Archaeology Search and
Exploration Institute
. "This is a fake. It's a fraud and it's of the
highest caliber according to what I can assess from the evidence and
talking to eyewitnesses and people from Turkey."

WND
reported
yesterday that Chinese and Turkish explorers with Noah's Ark Ministries
International
said they were "99.9 percent sure" they found the
remnants of the legendary biblical vessel high up on Mount Ararat in
eastern Turkey.

The 15-member team claims it recovered wooden specimens from a
structure at an altitude of 13,000 feet and that carbon dating suggested
it was 4,800 years old.


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