posted on May, 30 2006 @ 12:36 PM
Ron Wyatt was involved in several different "finds" over a couple of decades. He claimed to have found a cave under the stone where Jesus' cross
was erected with the Ark of the Covenant and several biblical artifacts in it, but claims that the Israeli government hushed it up and resealed the
cave. He claimed to have taken a swab of the blood on the Mercy Seat and had it analyzed at a lab, and claimed that it only contained half of the
normal chromosones that a human has, thereby "proving that Jesus had a mother but no earthly father".
He claimed to have found the area in the mountains where the Jews lived for many years, including finding the pillars that outlined the boundaries of
where they were allowed to live, altars that were referred to in the bible that were erected and other things.
He claimed to have found Noah's ark in a different location than biblical scholars say it rests, and claims to have evidence (iron nail and such)
from it, tested by an independent laboratory.
And then the story that you presented here.
I received an email in the mid 90's about Wyatt and his discoveries, so I did some reading about him over the last several years.
What he found (some say planted, falsified or hoaxed) would be amazing, but he would not let anyone else test the materials to authenticate them. He
would wave the "test results" in front of crowds that he was speaking to, but would not let anyone look at them.
Several of the people that he went on expeditions with or that helped finance his expeditions have backed away from his organization over time because
of the lack of shared evidence about his discoveries or an attitude from Wyatt of "I said it happened so you have to believe me" kind of stuff. He
was actively considered a heretic by some, and several letters have been written with that label.
It could be written off as that he was an amateur archeologist, inexperienced in the ways of mainstream archeology procedures, but others say
he was just financing jaunts around the world at other people's expense.
My mind is not made up as to whether or not he was a hoaxer. I wish that I could see the papers and test results that he had, but I cannot make the
trip to Tennessee to see them at his museum.
Anyway, it will be interesting to see what comes of this.
JDub