Near the village of Üzengili in eastern Turkey, south of the volcanic summit known as Mount Ararat, a long boat-shaped landform has become one of the most disputed sites in biblical archaeology. Identified in aerial photographs by Turkish Army Captain İlhan Durupınar in nineteen fifty-nine, the Durupınar formation has been promoted by independent investigators as the mineralized or collapsed remains of Noah’s Ark. Supporters point to its outline, reported proportions, local traditions, alleged subsurface patterns, unusual soil readings, metal-detection claims, and nearby perforated stones interpreted by some as ancient anchors. Others look higher on Ağrı Dağı, where the Ararat anomaly appears in aerial and satellite imagery beneath snow and ice. The strongest conventional explanation is geological: erosion, mudflows, landslides, tectonic movement, volcanic rocks, snow, shadow, and imaging effects can create shapes that resemble human structures. Alleged wood, metal, and organic samples face problems of excavation context and chain of custody. Yet the search persists because Genesis places the ark on the mountains of Ararat, ancient flood traditions are widespread, and no single investigation has closed every question. This episode follows the evidence, the claims, the tests, and the limits of what is known.


This podcast uses artificial intelligence in its research, writing, production, and narration. Episodes are editorially reviewed before publication.


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