Mount Ararat eruption
Ararat is located
at Agri in eastern Turkey near
the Armenian and Iranian borders. As the crow flies, it is about 250 kilometers
east of Erzurum, 130 kilometers southeast of
Kars,
and 160 kilometers north of Van. The main road between
Turkey and Iran goes from
Erzurum
through Dogubayazit (just south of Ararat) to Tabriz. The summit of Mt.
Ararat is 5,165 meters above sea level. It is higher than any mountain
in the continental United States except for Alaska or in Europe outside
the Caucasus.
Ararat is a dormant volcano; the last eruption was on June 2, 1840.
At present the upper third of the mountain is covered with snow all the
time; the last hundred meters of snow at the top have turned to ice. For
climbers on the mountain, fresh running water is available after the sun
has been up a while to melt the snow, but it is cut off in the late afternoon
when cold air has overcome the heat of the sun. Below the snow the slopes
are covered with great blocks of black basalt rock, some as large as village
houses.
Over the years various groups have explored Ararat in the hopes of finding
remains of Noah's Ark. Both Josephus in about 70 A.D. and Marco Polo about
1300 A.D. mention its existence on the mountain, but their reports are
based on others' accounts. Josephus remarks that its remains are on display
for all to see without need of an organized exploration. In more recent
years many groups have hunted for it there. The possibility that ancient
fables are historical fact is intriguing, and each new discovery of truth
in previously discredited records gives additional strength to continuing
the search for archaeological confirmation.
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