Two explorers believe they’ve located the remnants of Noah’s ark in the mountains of Turkey.
Artists rendering of Noah’s ark  |      Mt. Ararat, Turkey  |    
CASE DETAILS
Ark research team
Mount Ararat: according to the Bible, it’s  the area where Noah’s Ark came to rest after the great storm. It’s a  desolate terrain rising above the headwaters of the Tigris River. In  recent years, several expeditions have explored the Ararat Mountains.  Incredibly, two separate teams believe they may have found the ark, in  two different locations, 17 miles apart. 
One of the sites is on Mount Ararat’s  northeast side under a permanent 23-square-mile glacier. A Turkish  businessman named George Hagobian said that when he was a young boy in  1906, he saw Noah's Ark wedged in a melted part of the glacier. Hagobian  described the vessel to archaeological illustrator Elfred Lee: 
“He said it looked like a long  box. It was rectangular and the corners were kind of rounded a little  bit. The sides sloped in slightly. The roof, he said, was basically flat  with just a slight pitch to it, and there was a stair kind of an  apparatus at one end. His uncle hoisted him up onto this ladder, and he  walked on up onto the roof. And there, all the way down the middle of  the roof, he saw these holes, and he stuck his head in, and it was dark.  He shouted, and his voice echoed and re-echoed inside. It was hollow.  Hagobian went back a couple years later, saw the same thing, but ice and  snow were beginning to cover it up again.”
Artist rendering of possible ark
Seventeen years later, Elfred Lee met Ed  Davis, who, in 1943, was stationed in Iran with the U.S. Army. According  to Lee, Davis also said he had seen the ark:
 “When Ed Davis started talking,  the hair on the back of my head just stood up, because I could hear an  echo of George Hagobian from years before.” 
Ed Davis' sighting occurred in roughly the  same area as George Hagobian's. However, Davis said when he saw what he  thought was the ark, it had broken in two:
“We waited a while, and the fog  kind of lifted, and it shone through in the end. You could see in the  end of it. And we saw both parts. You stand there with your mouth wide  open.”
Elfred Lee recalled his conversation with Davis:
“Ed Davis described three decks  inside and large cages on the bottom deck, smaller cages on the second  deck, and on the roof, a venting system with many holes on it, so you  could see how the light and ventilation could go clear to the bottom  deck.”
A second theory
Although Hagobian and Davis weren’t able to  pinpoint the exact locations, their stories intrigued Don Shockey, an  amateur archaeologist: 
“I can't think of anything more  exciting that I could be doing in my lifetime than having a small part  in seeing this, whatever it is, verified. And we have good reason to  believe there's something there. We’ve got to prove it.”
Don Shockey launched an expedition to Mount  Ararat after studying classified U.S. satellite photos. Don said that  for three days, he and his guides climbed up the mountain’s south side:
“Our whole goal was to get to  this spot, over the top, down the glaciers, to this particular location  and verify what the satellite information had told us.”
The Turkish government prevented them from traveling to the north side, so Ahmet, a Turkish guide, continued on by himself.  
Ahmet crested Mt. Ararat and started down  the north slope. At an elevation of nearly 16,000 feet, he spotted  something half-buried in the snow. From a distance of 300 yards, he took  a photograph, which seemed to show the end of a rectangular object with  a peaked roof: Don Shockey recalled: 
“He came back, and I said, ‘Is  anything showing?’ He said, ‘A coop, a coop. Like a chicken coop. It had  a pointed top.’ And he said that you could see the outline of it. He  said in all of his years, he had never seen anything like it. He said,  ‘There's some artifact there.’" 
Don Shockey believed that Ahmet might have  glimpsed the remains of Noah's Ark.  Shockey returned to the States and  took the photograph to forensic anthropologist Dr. Jim Ebert: 
“It certainly does not look  natural. It looks very strikingly man-made to me. What I see when I look  at this is something that stands out from the rest of the terrain, and  that is what looks like a solid structure. You'll never know until you  get up there and can see it and stand next to it.”
Shockey returned to Mt. Ararat and studied  the mountain from the air. Unfortunately, the site was now covered by  snow.  Shockey stopped his search but remained convinced that he might  have found the resting place of Noah's Ark. Others, like author and ark  researcher David Fasold, disagreed: 
“We've been told for years that  Noah's Ark is on top of Mt. Ararat because that's what the Bible says.  And that's not what the Bible says. The Bible says the ark came to rest  upon the mountains of Ararat, that word is in the plural.”
David Fasold was a former merchant marine  officer and merchant salvage expert. He believed that the ark was buried  a full 17 miles south of Mt. Ararat. Fasold said his team searched the  site and discovered traces of iron, which don’t appear to be natural  deposits: 
“Every 20-30 inches,  approximately, we have the remains of an iron fitting or iron pin of  sorts that are still there in the soil and discernible.”
Fasold’s team brought back one of the iron fittings, one of 5,400 he said they found: 
“It’s been cut in half by a  diamond saw, scanned by electron microscopes at Los Alamos National  Laboratory, and this particular iron fitting is 94.84% man-made wrought  iron.”
Looking at the mound from above, the iron  deposits form a distinct pattern of intersecting lines, which Fasold  believes is the framework of the ark. Fasold said the boat’s length is  515 feet and the width averages 85 feet, the same measurements recorded  in the Bible:
“Given the shape of the thing and  the size of the thing and where they found it, I mean, if it walks like  a duck and quacks like a duck, until somebody finds something else,  what else could it possibly be but Noah's Ark?”
Some have suggested that David Fasold found  the remains of an ancient Mongol fort. Others say it’s a geological  formation. However, the Turkish government has declared the mound the  official site where Noah's Ark rests. Fasold said he’s certain of his  find: 
“The man who was in charge,  Professor Sali Barrak Tutam, who is also a geologist, he says it's  Noah's Ark, 200%. It is not a geological anomaly. It's a man-made  structure.”
Has one of mankind's greatest mysteries  finally been solved on a remote mountain range?  It’s obvious that there  needs to be more exploration before we’ll know the answer. 
source:http://www.unsolved.com/legends.html
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