Hello Wes! It appears you are coping by compiling bad information and incorrect information and attributing it to our work at Noah’s Ark Scans.
-We have never claimed to have found wood “from thousands of years ago” our soil samples confirmed high levels of organic matter and potassium, 100% consistent with decomposed lumber.
-The GPR scans prove this is not just a “geological anomaly.” Our scans revealed a 250 ft corridor, chambers, perfect right angles, and even a possible atrium beneath the soil.
-LiDAR scans of the site show its length is the exact length Genesis 6:15 states the Ark was, 300 cubits
-You are mistaken when referring to the site in SE Turkey, down by the Iraq border known as “Cudi Dagi”. The Bible said the Ark landed in the "Mountains" of Ararat (Urartu). Which is: A region of an ancient kingdom covering this area including the Durupinar site. Mount Ararat itself is a post-flood stratovolcano- which we have never claimed the Ark to be there, but 19 miles south.
- We are independent team completely unaffiliated with Ron Wyatt, so to attribute his research to ours is also misguided.
The first problem with the report is that no one involved within the team is a formal archaeologist, and therefore, their findings are based not on expertise of how to go about proving their findings but hobbyist speculation. This is not an appeal to authority, this is an appeal to the evidence and the proper means to analyze it. There is something to say for the fact that if you haven’t been trained in stratigraphy you don’t know what you don’t know.
This is shown in how they’ve derived their data with the use of ground penetrating radar. GPR in archaeology is heavily limited by soil composition, environmental factors, and interpretation challenges. It works poorly in clay, silt, or waterlogged soils due to signal attenuation. The process cannot identify materials and the images presented cannot differentiate rocks, water, unusual soil formations, or plant root systems. You simply don’t know what you’re looking at with GPR alone.
While the ark site has produced wood claimed to date to thousands of years ago, none of these tests meets scientific standards, and the only formal tests show the wood instead appears to belong to the 7th century AD. This discrepancy between claimed age and actual dating undermines the credibility of physical evidence.
According to Genesis 8:4, Noah’s Ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat. But the modern site of Mount Ararat has only been called that since the 13th century, whereas early Christian and Jewish tradition instead pointed to Mount Qardu (now called Jabal Judi).
The broader issue is that the precise location of Ararat remains unknown, making any specific claim about physical remains inherently speculative. Without independent archaeological corroboration and reliable dating methods, sites like Durupınar cannot be definitively established as authentic ark remains.
The boat-like physical formation isn’t even an unusual feature on modern Ararat and many of these almond shaped convex structure can be found in the region. “It looks like a boat to me” just doesn’t amount to real evidence.
Also, I am aware this is the site Ron Wyatt was reporting as the Ark decades ago. Believe me, I watched more than I should have from his VHS series in the 90s and ‘00s. I’m going to be as kind as I possibly can with this one: with as much respect as I can muster, Ron Wyatt was not an archaeologist, Ron Wyatt was a conman.