


So there they laid Jesus, because of the Jews’ Preparation Day, for the tomb was nearby.” The entrance was blocked by a circular stone of the same diameter as the circle chiseled around the entrance. John 19:41,42 reads: “Now in the place where He was crucified there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb in which no one had yet been laid. The latest dated specimens were from the Roman period, whence the grain bin was closed in the first century AD. When he turned these pottery pieces in to Antiquities, the Israeli authorities informed Ron that the earliest dated back to the Jebusite time (10th century BC). Ron chiseled through the plaster and found a large amount of pottery among the dirt and debris used as fill to form the cistern. Either of these explanations would explain the presence of the “rope hole” chiseled in the cliff-face - it was for the rope that held the bucket or jug which was lowered down into the shaft to retrieve grain or water. At some point in time it had been modified and plastered, reused as a cistern. Carefully removing debris, they found themselves in an approximately 15 foot diameter round chamber carved out of the rock with steps chiseled into the shaft descending from the top in a spiral to the bottom. They reached bedrock 38 feet below the present ground surface. He returned in January, 1979 with the permission of the local authorities to excavate. When sightseeing near the Damascus Gate, Ron had a supernatural experience. Due to a painful swelling in Ron’s legs, he was forced to pause a few days. In 1978, Ron Wyatt and his sons, Danny and Ronny, made two trips to Israel in order to drive to the western shore of the Gulf of Aqaba to go scuba diving in search of chariot parts in the Red Sea. The following text is a summary of a 2009 post on Anchorstone, with photo’s taken from Wyatt’s Discovery site. A man with such a deficient biological education would be utterly unable to sell whatever biological lie. Ron testifies of this, and does so quite candidly: in a public talk, he mentions 23 X-chromosomes.

The Jewish employees of the Jerusalem medical laboratory would not answer him: they insisted in asking whose blood this was. The white blood cells were alive, and contained 24 chromosomes. Ron wanted to know whether the blood was human or animal.
#Ark of the covenant found cracked
In 1982, anestetist/archaeologist Ron Wyatt scraped rusty-looking stains off the cracked stone lid covering the Ark, had them suspended, cultured and karyotyped. The real Ark is presently guarded in Jerusalem, but no official photographs are available. The ridge surrounding the top is too high, and the Angels’ overarching wings are too centered: for the primary purpose of the Ark was to be a seat (whence the name of the cover of the Ark: Seat of Mercy), with the wings serving as a backrest. While the British-Israelites dreamt of sacred treasure, the Irish patriots battled to save a national monument, making this more than just a strange interlude in history.Steven Spielberg’s reconstruction of the Ark of the Covenant. Who were the excavators? Was their mission entirely eccentric, or part of the deeper story of class acrimony and emergent nationalism? How successful was the backlash? Historian and archaeologist Máiread Carew pieces together the narrative of Tara and the Ark in lively and meticulous detail, showing how the clash between the British-Israelites and the cultural nationalists represented colonialism versus emergent nationalism. This book tells the story of the British-Israelite excavations on Tara in its archaelogical, historical, cultural and political context. The Press supported their protests, making this the first media campaign to save a national monument. Their strange and unlawful activity provoked a protest from cultural figures such as William Butler Yeats, Douglas Hyde and Maud Gonne - who lit a bonfire and sang ‘A nation once again’ on Tara. These 'British-Israelites' believed they would find buried there the Ark of the Covenant, the chest said to contain the Ten Commandments inscribed on stone tablets.
