Always interested in the history of the
Bible and
Noah's Ark, Fasold studied pre-Christian accounts of the
Deluge and came to believe that the ark would be found not on
Mount Ararat but somewhere to the southwest. In 1985, Fasold teamed up with
Ron Wyatt to investigate the
Durupınar site (located at approximately ), a boat-shaped mound site named after
Turkish Army Captain İlhan Durupınar who identified the formation in a
Turkish Air Force aerial photo while on a mapping mission for
NATO in 1959. In 1985, Fasold and Wyatt were joined by
geophysicist John Baumgardner for the expedition recounted in Fasold's 1988 book
The Ark of Noah. As soon as Fasold saw the site, he exclaimed that it was a ship wreck. Fasold had brought a state-of-the-art
frequency generator, set on the wavelength for
iron and searched the formation for internal iron loci. This technique was later compared to
dowsing by the site's detractors. Fasold and the team measured the length of the formation as 538 feet, close to the 300
cubits of the
Bible if the
Egyptian cubit of 20.6 inches is used. Later measurements by others found it to be 515 feet, exactly 300 Egyptian cubits in length. Fasold believed the team had found the fossilized remains of the upper deck and that the original reed substructure has disappeared. In the nearby village of Kazan (formerly called Arzap), so-called
drogue stones that they believed were once attached to the ark were investigated.
The Ark of Noah and the break with Wyatt and the ark as a large
reed boat. Ron Wyatt and David Fasold were both featured on a
20/20 television special soon after their expedition.
Charles Berlitz wrote of Fasold's searches in his 1987 book
The Lost Ship of Noah, also printing part of an extensive 1985 interview with Fasold on pages 157-161. In 1988, Fasold published his own book,
The Ark of Noah. During this time, Fasold formed the Noahide Society and issued a newsletter called
Ark-Update. He also produced several audio and video tapes.
Doubts and changing views During the 1990s, Fasold was caught between three opposing camps, all of whom derided his interest in the site: orthodox creationists who believed the ark could only lie on Mount Ararat; Wyatt and others who continued their research and reported significant discoveries; and skeptical geologists and biblical minimalists who called the site a hoax. At other times he claimed that the site was only what the ancients
believed was
Ziusudra's 'ark of reeds'. In 1996 Fasold coauthored a paper with geologist Lorence Collins entitled "Bogus 'Noah's Ark' from Turkey Exposed as a Common Geologic Structure" that concluded the boat-shaped formation was a curious upswelling of mud that
happened to look like a boat. In April 1997 during his testimony in an Australian court case Fasold repudiated his belief in the Ark, and stated that he regarded the claim as "absolute BS". Ark researchers David Allen Deal and Australian friend and biographer June Dawes According to Collins, Fasold maintained his view that Durunipar was not the Ark till the end of his life. Collins further emphasized the financial cost that this decision, as having cancelled the book publication, he died virtually penniless. ==Jabal al-Lawz as Mount Sinai==