Cracks I Filmed on Noah's Ark Show Something Underneath
As a boy, my Daddy had cattle on his 50 red clay acres in Springtown, Texas, while my Grandfather grew turnips almost up to his death in the black bottom land of Little Elm, Texas, butting up to Lake Lewisville. I've seen water erosion in washes on my father's place, and I've seen water operate on black land too.
The dirt surrounding the Noah's Ark Excavation Site is like black land that is sticky when it's wet and dries like a brick. I've never seen water cut deep into any dirt like a knife, as I filmed on my trip to the Ark, especially black land. There is clearly structure underneath the soil that is separating in front of our eyes.
The Ark is blooming like a flower for the world right now, proving after 4400 years that it's not a rock formation.
Gene K. Chapman, Executor
Christian Apologetics Library of Fort Worth
P. O. Box 12003
Fort Worth, Texas 76110
FaithUp@email.com
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