I have proof Noah built the Ark just like God told him to

by KateWild 22 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • KateWild
  • redpilltwice
    redpilltwice

    Forget about the trucks and cranes and stuff... Noah wasn't alone you see!

    Have you forgotten that, you silly one?

  • Caedes
    Caedes

    Never mind the fact that the construction above wouldn't even survive being floated, that keel wouldn't be capable of supporting that structure in the water if it isn't capable of supporting it on dry land

    You can see the huge steel and concrete support structures going up through the entire structure.

    Shows a lack of faith!

    The irony of Kate posting this after the thread on guided evolution is monumental though.

  • Saename
    Saename

    I do hope that this is sarcasm. I think it is sarcasm. Please, God, let me be right this time.

  • KateWild
    KateWild

    I thought this didn't work. I didn't post it two hours ago. Probably on a delay.

    Caedes I like to have a laugh I am not rigid about things. I just like to have a debate now and again.

    Seaname, I will let you figure out if I believe Noah used cranes and pick up trucks

    Redpill oh yeah if there were eight people no needs for cranes they can be a human tower xx

  • Vidiot
    Vidiot

    Isn't this thing being built by Ken Hamm, the Creation Museum guy?

    I can't decide which is more ironic...

    a) ...that it could only be built using state-of-the-art modern construction techniques and materials, or...

    b) ...that said irony is probably completely lost on the fundies who are so enthusiastically building it.

    :smirk:

  • TD
    TD

    Any boat with joints in the hull is going to leak. -Not a lot, but enough that anything much large than a sloop needs to be pumped. In the days of sailing ships, those pumps ranged from small units operated by one man to larger units operated by several men, to still larger units powered by draft animals on treadmills.

    Building a wooden boat is one thing. Building a pump that would lift seawater by roughly the height of the structure in the picture above is something else entirely.

  • James Mixon
    James Mixon

    San Diego wild Animal park.. Employees-500, park 1800 acres, capacity 3000 animals.

    THE boat....employees 8, 17400 birds, 12000 reptiles, 9000 mammals, 5000 amphibians and

    2,000,000 insects, give or take a hundred or so.

    Please people get your head out of your Ass if you believe this story.....

  • KateWild
    KateWild

    Bonsai, here is the original thread if you want to swap your post xx

  • Perry
    Perry

    Here's some more evidence from antiquity Kate. Thanks for posting on this fascinating subject!

    Noah’s Ark: (137m (450 feet) long, 23m (75 feet) wide, and 14m (45 feet) high).

    In the writings of Pliny the Elder (AD 23–79), I discovered the table (below) about ships of antiquity. This documents the rapid advances the ancients made in ship-building technology in just a few centuries. The time period in the table is from about the seventh century BC to the end of the third century BC.3

    VesselInventorAuthorityApprox. Time
    Double-banked galleyThe ErythraeansDamastes7th C. BC
    Trireme (three banks of oars)Aminocles of CorinthThucydides6th C. BC
    Quadrireme (four banks)The CarthaginiansAristotle5th C. BC
    Quinquereme (five)The SalaminiansMnesigiton4th C. BC
    Galleys with six banks of oarsThe SyracusansXenagoras4th C. BC
    Up to ten banksAlexander the GreatMnesigiton4th C. BC
    Up to twelve banksPtolemy SoterPhilostephanus3rd C. BC
    Up to fifteen banksDemetrius, son of AntigonusPhilostephanus3rd C. BC
    Up to thirty banksPtolemy PhiladelphusPhilostephanus3rd C. BC
    Up to forty banksPtolemy Philopator, surname TryphonPhilostephanus3rd C. BC



    The biblical Ark was within the range of acceptable dimensions for a vessel in ancient times. Though it was huge, other wooden vessels from ancient times were just as large.

    When we think of warships of antiquity, we think of the tiny ships that were shown in a movie like Ben Hur. They had about fifty or so men, and a single tier of oars. This was the best Hollywood could do on a limited budget. It may reflect our evolutionary thinking, that the ancients were primitive compared to us. While we may flatter ourselves with our supposed knowledge of ancient history, the actual facts that come down to us tell us another story. From this table in Pliny, we can see a rapid rise in technology over a few hundred years which culminated in a ship of forty tiers of oars (when we say forty tiers we mean forty levels of rowers!). Now the question is, do we have any descriptions of these ships so we can comprehend how large they really were? Fortunately, we have a good description of one of the early third-century ships and an excellent description of the largest ship Pliny lists.4

    The Leontifera

    There was a naval battle in the Aegean Sea in 280 BC. The following is Ussher’s description of what happened:

    When Antigonus, surnamed Gonatas, the son of Demetrius Poliorcetes, heard how Seleucus was murdered, he made an expedition into Macedonia. He planned to get there before Ceraunus could, with his army and naval forces. However, Ceraunus had all Lysimachus’ fleet in readiness, and set out and met him in a good battle formation at sea. In his navy, ships were sent from Heraclea in Pontus, some of six, some of five tiers of oars. These kinds of ships were called “Aphracta”. The largest ship of all had eight tiers of oars and was called the Leontifera. She was admired by all for her large size and exquisite construction. In her were a hundred oars per tier, so that on each side there were eight hundred rowers which made 1600 in all. On the upper deck or hatches there were 1200 fighting men who were under two special commanders. When the battle began, Ceraunus won and Antigonus was forced to flee with all his navy. In this fight, the ships from Heraclea performed the best and among them the Leontifera did the best of all.5

    We are not given the dimensions of this ship. However, the oarsmen on each tier would have to be at least three feet apart, the approximate distance between airline seats. (Has anyone ever complained of having too much space between airline seats?!) For 100 rowers per tier, allowing for a bow and a stern, this ship could easily have been 120–150 metres (400–500 feet) long.

    Athenaeus gives us a detailed description of a very large warship, built by Ptolemy Philopator (c. 244–205 BC).7 It was 130m (420 feet) long, 18m (57 feet) wide, and 22m (72 feet) high to the top of her gunwale. From the top of its sternpost to the water line was 24 metres (79.5 feet). It had four steering oars 14m (45 feet) long. It had 40 tiers of oars. The oars on the uppermost tier were 18m (57 feet) long. The oars were counter-balanced with lead to make them easier to handle. It had a double bow and a double stern and carried seven rams, of which one was the leader and the others were of gradually reducing size. It had 12 under-girders 275m (900 feet) long. The ship was manned by 400 sailors to handle the rigging and the sails, 4,000 rowers and 2,850 men in arms for a total of 7,250 men. This ship was too large to be of much practical use.8

    Some things of interest about this ship. First, there are no forests worth mentioning in Egypt. All the lumber had to be imported from elsewhere, likely Lebanon. This ship had a crew that was almost twice as large as that of the largest aircraft carrier we have ever built! The size of the ship approximated the size of Noah’s Ark. Like Noah’s Ark, it would have had to carry provisions for all on board.

    Article

    Masters-level students at Leicester University’s Department of Physics and Astronomy in England examined the ark’s dimensions as described in Genesis 6:13-22 and came to a stunning conclusion.

    “University of Leicester students show Noah’s ark would have been strong enough to carry pairs of each animal species,” proclaims a statement on the university’s website".

    Article

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