@lightshot Text
Was den Ron Wyatt so unglaubwuerdig macht ist die Liste seiner ganzen Entdeckungen, ganz gleich ob er mit den Aussagen der Bibel uebereinstimmt oder nicht.
By the time of his death on August 4, 1999, his claimed discoveries included:
Noah's Ark (the Durupınar site, located 18.25 miles south of Mount Ararat)[2]
Anchor stones (or drogue stones) used by Noah on the Ark[3]
The post-flood house, grave markers and tombs of Noah and his wife[4]
The location of Sodom and Gomorrah and the other Cities of the Plain: Zoar, Zeboim and Admah[5]
Sulfur/brimstone balls from the ashen remains of Sodom and Gomorrah.[6]
The Tower of Babel site (in southern Turkey)[7]
How the Egyptians may have built the pyramids.[8]
The site of the Israelites' crossing of the Red Sea (located in the Gulf of Aqaba)[9]
Chariot wheels and other relics of the army of Pharaoh at the bottom of the Red Sea
The site of the biblical Mt. Sinai (in Saudi Arabia at Jabal al Lawz)[10]
A chamber at the end of a maze of tunnels under Jerusalem containing artifacts from Solomon's Temple[11]
The site of the Crucifixion of Jesus
Christ’s blood, dripped onto the Mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant beneath the Crucifixion site.
Burial pots off the coast of Ashkelon[12]
und zum Blut:
However, the test results on the blood found by Ron have never been released, and researchers can find no trace of them or the laboratory that performed the analysis. Ron would never tell anyone where the analysis was performed, other than that it was in Israel. Until the results are made public, doubts will always be cast on Ron’s c