Local Kurds led Ed Davis to the Ark in 1943 (Talk.Origins)

Claim CH505.7:


 * In the summer of 1943, while a U.S. Army sergeant stationed in Hamadan, Iran, Ed Davis became friends with some local Kurd tribesmen (or Lourd, in Davis's original account), who told him of Noah's ark on Mount Ararat. The ark and items from it were considered holy relics, generally kept from outsiders, but the patriarch's friendship with Davis made him an exception. They showed him items from the ark, including a cage door, latches, and shepherd staffs. All the wooden items were described as petrified. Tribal leader Abas-Abas and seven of his sons led Davis up the northeast side of Ararat, but bad weather prevented getting closer than half a mile to the ark. But Davis did see it; it was broken into three or four pieces, of which Davis saw two; the nearer had at least three floors. Abas-Abas supplied other details. The living space for people is at the top; the ark's door was hinged at the top; construction was done with wooden pegs.

Source: Shockey, Don, 1986. Agri-Dagh, Mount Ararat: The Painful Mountain, Fresno, CA: Pioneer Publishing.
 * NoahsArkSearch.com, n.d. Ed Davis drawings from 1985-1986.

CreationWiki response:

Talk Origins cited source (Crouse 1993) is no longer available. As such there is no way of checking the legitimacy of their claims nor the quality or objectiveness of the source.

Curdos locais levaram Ed Davis para a Arca em 1943 (Talk.Origins)