SCIENCEFOX NEWS
Could Noah's Ark remains be buried in Turkey? New findings revive age-old debate
A researcher claims new soil data from Turkey's Durupinar site supports the theory that it contains Noah's Ark remains. The findings show chemical differences in soil samples, including higher organic matter and potassium, suggesting decayed organic material. Geologists debate whether the formation is natural or man-made.
Mentioned
Related Signal
Adjacent reporting
- Researcher believes Noah's Ark found in Turkey after new underground scans
- Ancient fossilized trees may finally prove Noah’s Ark flood is true: scientists
- Signs of human remains found at mother of Kristin Smart killer’s home
- Final site of Noah’s Ark spotted in centuries-old map — matching real-life location long speculated as the buried Biblical relic
- Ancient artifacts found beneath Cape Canaveral Space Force Station as one mystery still stumps researchers
- DNA proves remains found in the Columbia River are of a family missing since 1958