413 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
413 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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What follows is an article published in the Australian 'Good
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Weekend' magazine published on Sundays with the 'Sydney Morning Herald'
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newspaper, August 15th 1992.
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The article is titled 'The Boat People', written by Ben Hills of
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the 'Herald'.
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Re-written by Scott Mackenzie, Newcastle Australia
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3:622/402@Fidonet
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" An eminent Australian geologist is spearheading a campaign to sink the
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claims by amateur archaeologists that they've found Noah's ark. Ben
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Hills reports. "
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' OVER THERE, ' Ian Plimer shades his eyes against the glare
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of the desert sun with one strong, brown hand and points with the other
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to a cleft in the bosom of the next range of hills. 'It's about the right
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size and shape ... see how the sides taper together at the bow.'
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He squats and pokes amongst the shards of ferricreten shale at
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his feet with a geologist's hammer. 'Here are some rivets,' he cries,
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dropping some odd round bits of what look like rust into a calico sample
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bag. 'That is definately petrified wood ... and look at this [ he
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scoops up some pebbles]. Wouldn't you say they look like fossilised
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kangaroo shit?'
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He straightens up, brushing the dust from his jeans, and scans
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his field-glasses over the dessicated landscape of stoney russet dunes
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sparsely spiked with stunted acacias. 'The evidence is overwhelming -
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we are standing amongst the ruins of Noah's ark.'
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He pauses for a while, deadpan, then throws his head back and
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laughs long and loud, frightening a flock of galahs into flight.
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Ian Plimer has come to this desolate corner of the Outback not
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to discover the ark, but to sink it; not for evidence that the Biblical
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story of Noah is untrue, but for scientific proof that claims of its
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discovery are foolish, or fraudulent, or both.
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We are on the outskirts of a bush hamlet known to most
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Australians only as a name on a weather map, a name that usually has
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numbers beside it such as 45C, or the notation that it is two years
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since the last decent rain. Tibooburra is not far from the notional
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spot where a kangaroo could stand with one leg in Queensland, one in NSW
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and it's tail in South Australia; the 'big smoke' is Broken Hill, four
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axle-busting hours away, and if you're travelling here from Sydney or
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Adelaide, you'd get to Hong Kong quicker.
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Melbourne, Ian Plimer's home when he is not breaking boulders
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out back of Burke or lectruing on international scientific symposia in
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Stockholm and Vienna, is 1,200 kilometres away. He is professor of
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geology at Melbourne University, and it is from there that he has
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spearheaded a remarkable campaign by a group of eminent Australian
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scientists to try and discredit what they see as the cult of 'Young
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Earth Noah's Flood Creationism' which has been barnstorming the country.
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Their immediate target is a retired teacher named Allen Roberts,
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who has been lecturing audiences several hundred strong from Perth to
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Sydney and Hobart about his 'discovery' of Noah's ark on a mountainside
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in Turkey. To support his claims, he has been exhibiting pieces of
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'petrified wood', 'rusty rivets', 'fossilised animal droppings' and
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photographs of a boat-shaped structure on the mountainside which he says
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is the size of the ark ... the same sort of 'evidence' that Plimer has
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discovered closer to home at Tibooburra.
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'If it's not Noah's ark, what is it?' Roberts has been asking
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his audiences, as he attempts to raise several thousand dollars for a
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return expedition to the site.
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Scoffs Professor Plimer, 'If my discovery at Tibooburra is not
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the real ark, just explain how the blind marsupial mole got from Turkey
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to Australia.'
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Plimer and his colleagues - who hold university chairs in
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biology, palaeontology and geology - say that Roberts is deluded. His
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'ark' is nothing more than a common geological formation called a
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syncline, a fold of the rocks in the earth's crust which have been
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weathered away over the millennia. The shape on the hillside at
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Tibooburra is a typical example - in fact, the hills between here and
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Broken Hill are alive with them, scores if not hundreds of synclines, a
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veritable armada of arks.
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So the battle has been joined - and a great deal more hinges on
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it rather than whether or not Allen Roberts has found Noah's ark. It is
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a battle that pits science against fundamentalist Christianity in a way
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not seen since the great Darwinist debates of 150 years ago. Writs have
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been issued, security guards called in, death threats are flying, Satan
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has been invoked ... but that's getting ahead of the story.
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The lights are snapped off, plunging the church hall into
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darkness. There is whispering and scuffling of feet as the audience
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cranes its neck in anticipation. Suddenly, projected on to the overhead
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screen, splashes a picture of a barren beige mountainside somewhere in
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Turkish Armenia, with a striking oval-shaped rock formation outlined on
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it by shadow.
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To the trained eye - and there is more than one skeptical
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scientist who has paid his $4 and infiltrated the meeting at the South
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Blackburn Baptist church this April evening - the structure is instantly
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recognisable as a common geological syncline. But the congregation, 300
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or 400 strong, is mostly made up of true believers, and this is not what
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they have come to hear.
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The man at the dais adjusts his glasses and consults his notes.
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He talks about the 'scientific measurements' that have been made at this
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site, the finds of fossilised remains, the metal detector readings which
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show a pattern of buried rivets.
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'We have here, it seems, fossilised under mud, a gigantic boat
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which is similar in size to the Biblical Noah's ark.' He pauses for
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effect. 'If it is, this will be the most significant archaeological
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discovery of the millenium ... [ it will ] challenge popularly accepted
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theories of evolution.'
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The lights go on amid applause, and the audience takes a closer
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look at the speaker. In appearance at least, 'Dr' Allen Roberts is
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closer to the stereotype of the dotty don than the suave Ian Plimer. He
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is a slightly stooped man in his 60th year, with metal-rimmed glasses, a
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grey beard and a soft, punctilious style of speech.
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In fact, although most of the audience does not know this,
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Australia's most prominent 'arkeologist' is not a scientist at all - his
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degrees are in teaching and history - and some sleuthing has discovered
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that his doctorate is in fact a correspondance degree from a clapboard
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Bible college in Florida, the self-styled Freedom University.
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Taking in the hour-long lecture from a seat at the back of the
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hall is Ian Plimer, who has driven out to the bellbird suburb of
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Blackburn because the television program that night was 'uninspiring'.
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Actually, that's not the whole story. For more than seven years Plimer
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has been seeking out and confronting creationism, or anti-science as he
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calls it.
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Plimer is no stranger to meetings like this. His finest hour -
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a stunt which earned him the first of many threats, physical as well as
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legal - came in 1988 when he took on Duane Gish, head of the San Diego-
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based Institute for Creation Research, star of international talk
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circuits and author of 'Evolution - The fossils say no' and other
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creationist gospels.
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the confrontation took place at Sydney University before an
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audience of about 1,000, many of them believers who were bussed in from
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around NSW.
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Plimer did not content himself with the scientific debunking of
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creationism: he tackled Gish head-on, citing a US study which appeared
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to show that school children taught creationism were more likely to
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become atheists. 'Here is Satan,' Plimer cried, pointing at the
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astonished Californian evangelist. 'He wants God's blessing for the
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Devil's work.' The climax of the performance came when, to ridicule
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the claim that evolution was 'only a theory', Plimer donned a pair of
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insulated gloves, plugged a cable into a power point, and thrust the two
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live wires at Gish, inviting him to test the theory of electricity. The
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audience erupted and Gish returned to the United States muttering about
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suing for defamation.
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What was to happen in Melbourne was less dramatic, typical of
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the trouble Plimer and a flying squad of like-minded academics, many of
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them members of the Australian Skeptics, have been provoking at Roberts's
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meetings around Australia. Plimer introduced himself at 'half-time',
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handed over his busines card, and asked whether he could ask a few
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questions when the meeting resumed. He and one or two other skeptics
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had independantly made their way to the hall in Blackburn were told to
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leave. The police were called, and amid shouts of abuse, Plimer was
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forced to exit.
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'I am not out to destroy their beliefs, and I am not
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anti-religious, as they would make out,' says Plimer. 'But I am out to
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stop them teaching creationism as science. If you want to accept what
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they say, that the earth was formed 10,000 years ago, that Noah's ark
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physically existed and so on, then you have to throw not only all
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geology, but all astronomy, all physics, all biology, into the garbage
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can. It is anti-science, and as one of the shareholders of knowledge I
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am employed by the community to rigorously attack it wherever I come
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across it.'
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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So who is his foe, Allen Roberts, this studious old man with the
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grey goatee who has brought down on his head the wrath of the entire
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Australian scientific community?
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Unfortunately, Roberts himself declined to talk to 'Good
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Weekend', citing variously the need to meet a publisher's deadline for a
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book about his 'arkeological' adventures, and his humiliation at
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recently having been awarded the Australian Skeptics Bent Spoon award
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(for the 'most preposterous paranormal piffle' of the year), beating a
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world-class field which included the Briton Colin Andrews, who lectures
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on the extra-terrestrial origins of crop circles, a US Hopi indian
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called Robert Morning Sky, who predicts aliens will come to earth later
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this year, and an obscure Australian sect which is girding itself for
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the world to end October 21 at 1 o'clock in the morning ( 2am if
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daylight saving is in force ).
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Until he sprang into the international headlines a year ago,
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Roberts lived a life of pious obscurity with his family in a brick
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veneer ranch-house in bosky Baulkham Hills, on Sydney's north-west
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fringe. He was brought up in a strict Baptist family in Broken Hill and
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became a primary teacher. In 1969 he moved to Sydney, where he taught
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English at Westmead Teachers' College (now the University of Western
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Sydney) until around 1980 when he left to found his own religious school
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at Baulkham Hills, the now-defunct Australian College of Christian
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Education.
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Roberts has always held strong fundamentalist Christian beliefs,
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and has been in close contact with creationist organisations in
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Australia and overseas for a number of years. He has, in particular,
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been obsessed with the idea that Noah's ark might actually exist since
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the early 1960s, when he saw an aerial photograph of that ship-shaped
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formation on a Turkish mountainside in Australian Pix magazine.
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Neither Plimer, nor any of the other Skeptics, had heard of
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Roberts until August last year when news agencies carried a story that
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this 'Australian archaeologist' - along with three Americans and a
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Briton - had been kidnapped by Kurdish guerillas in south-east Turkey,
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whilst on their way to search for the ark. The Telegraph-Mirror,
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predictably, christened him Indiana Jones and kept his story going for
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three weeks until Roberts (and the others), unharmed apart from a
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swollen ankle, was released and made his way hom to the Hinch show.
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Roberts was by no means the first, nor the ten thousandth and
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first, 'arkeologist' to make his way to the ancient biblical lands of
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eastern Turkey, the mountains of Ararat near the modern border with
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Armenia, where Genesis says the ark came to rest after the flood
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subsided.
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Just why finding the remains of the ark - and not, say, the
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tower of Babel - should have become the holy grail of creationism
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puzzles scientists. They wonder whether it hads something to do with
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the powerful images of creatures trooping two by two on the strange
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wooden vessel, etched in the subconscious from childhood Bible studies.
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Whatever the reason, for 22 centuries before Allen Roberts came along,
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people have been searching the snowy flanks of Ararat and discovering a
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whole flotilla of arks of varying veracity.
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As early as 275 BC - possibly the first ark 'sighting' - a
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Babylonian historian recorded that the ark was still to be seen in the
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mountains, and Kurdish souvenir-hunters 'scrape off bitumen and carry it
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away and make use of it by way of alexipharmic and amulet'. Some
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centuries later, in the time of St Gregory the Enlightener, a monk who
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attempted to climb the mountain was given a fragment of the ark which
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can be inspected today in the monastery at Echmiadzin, near the foot of
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Ararat.
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In 1876, an intrepid Englishman named Lord Bryce discovered a
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gopherwood spar on a rocky ledge, and hacked a small piece off for a
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souvenir. Twenty years later one, Archdeacon Nouri, a dignitary of the
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Chaldean Church, discovered the whole thing, preserved remarkably
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intact, and reported that he was 'overcome ... the sight of the ark
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thusverifying the truthof the scriptures'. In 1916 a Russian pilot
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spotted it from the air, and the Tsar dispatched an expedition which
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located and explored it.
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Each 'discovery' has its loyal adherents among the various
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feuding schools of 'arkeology'.
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The most recent ark-rush was inspired by another pilot, Francis
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Gary Powers - the US U2 spy pilot shot down over the Soviet Union in
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1960. A totally fraudulent claim was put about - unsubstantiated by any
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of the archives of that period - tha Powers filmed the remains of the
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ark 1,900 metres up on the flanks of a mountain near Ararat called
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al-Judi, while searching for Soviet missile sites.
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Since then, no fewer than 60 expeditions, most of them financed
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by eccentric fundamentalists from the American Bible Belt, have headed
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off into the hills of eastern Turkey, spawning half a dozen 'I
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discovered the REAL ark' books, complete with photos, drawings and
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diagrams ... everything bar the exclusive interview with Noah, which has
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been reserved by 60 minutes anyway.
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Never a nation look a gift horse in the mouth, the bemused Turks
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(although prudently attributing everything to 'American Researchers')
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have decided to cash in on the credulous creationists, declaring the
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area a national park called Nuh'un Gemisi (Noah's Ark) complete with
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roadside stalls, a viewing platform and a hotel to cater for the
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pilgrims. It has become a sort of Biblical Big Banana. This, then, was
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the place Allen Roberts came to make his great discovery.
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To meet the man who can be said to have started Roberts off on
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his crusade from Baulkham Hills to Nuh'un Gemisi, you have to travel to
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Nashville, Tennessee, a state famous not only for its country music, but
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(appropriately enough) for the notorious 'monkey trial' in which John
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Scopes was convicted of the crime of teaching evolution in school. If
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Ron Wyatt was on the jury, you would get the same verdict in 1992 as was
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handed out in 1925.
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Wyatt is a creationist (he says it is an 'insult to the
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intelligence' to accept that man is descended from the apes) and the
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most flamboyant of the American ark-trekkers. His book 'Discovered -
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Noah's Ark' was published in 1989 after more than 20 years of research
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during visits to the Middle East, and if you accept his account, Wyatt
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(whose only professional qualification is as a nurse/anaesthetist) is
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the most accomplished archaeologist who has ever lived. Indiana Jones
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is a wimp by comparison.
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As well as the ark - and in between being beaten, robbed,
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kidnapped and shot at by terrorists - the intrepid Wyatt claims to have
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discovered the ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah, chariot wheels in the Red
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Sea where Moses once parted the waters, the 'real' Mt Sinai, the 'real'
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site of Christ's execution and burial, and (one of a number of
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discoveries made while Wyatt was under the influence of divine
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direction) the ark of the covenant. Wyatt, has, of course, 'scientific
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proof' of all this.
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It was to Wyatt's home in Tennessee that Allen Roberts made his
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first pilgrimage two years ago, and it was from Wyatt's treasure-trove
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of 'arkabilia' that Roberts borrowed much of the 'proof' that he has
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produced at his lectures around Australia.
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The piece of petrified wood (free of age rings, of course,
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because seasons had not been invented before the flood), the taped
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outline of the 'ship' measured by sub-surface radar, the rusty iron
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'rivets,' the petrified pieces of poo (carpolites) ... these came from
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the collection of remarkable Ron Wyatt, and are in fact acknowledged as
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such in the fine print at the back of Roberts own booklet, 'If this is
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not Noah's ark what is it?
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Asked whether he believed Roberts had plagiarised his work,
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Wyatt said he had no hard feelings, and in fact was planning yet another
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visit to Turkey with Roberts later this year. 'Everybody I have taken
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out there, archaeologists, philologists, professors of chemistry ...
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after they came back they said 'they' had found the ark,' sighed Wyatt.
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Although Plimer has not visited the al-Judi mountain where the
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helpful Turks have constructed their ark-viewing platform, he is
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familiar with the Turkey/Armenia borderlands, having mounted a number of
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Geological expeditions there to search for gold. He and his colleagues
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in Australia and overseas have compiled an impressive library of
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documentation to show that the 'ark' and the artefacts are actually
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common natural phenomena, and that the ark could not have existed.
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And they have allies from an unexpected quarter - the mainstream
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creation movement itself. You see, there is a second ark, which was
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spotted years before the al-Judi discovery about 25 kilometres away,
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buried under ice and snow, near the top of Mt Ararat itself. Accounts
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of expeditions to this site, complete with fanciful drawings (and even
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photographs) of the ark, festooned with icicles and teetering on the
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edge of a precipice, had been convincing the credulous for many
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generations before Wyatt and Roberts came along.
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This second site is the favourite of the 'mother church' of
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global creationism, the Institute for Creation Research in San Diego,
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California, which was founded more than 20 years ago by a hydrologist
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named Henry Morris. The institute has raised large amounts of money
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over the years with a highly sophisticated print & video operation, and
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has organised a number of expeditions to search for 'their' ark on Mt
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Ararat - the idea that it is the wrong ark is anathema.
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The Australian end of this 'ministry' is the Creation Science
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Foundation, which operates out of Brisbane, and which claims to be the
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second largest creationist organisation in the world. It's head is Carl
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Wieland, a retired doctor who lives in Cairns when he is not travelling
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around the country lecturing. He told 'Good Weekend' that the
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foundation was shortly to publish a 'scientific paper' debunking the
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Wyatt/Roberts 'discovery'.
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'It is not the ark, but it is not a syncline either,' says
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Wieland. The foundation's 'geological adviser' - a man named Andrew
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Snelling who is one of the rare creationists with a genuine science
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degree - later described the formation as 'just a hump of basement rock
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which has been forced up and affected by faulting'. As for Allen
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Roberts, 'We are not saying he is a fraud. He is a very likeable guy,
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but we believe he ahs been misled. We are very sorry he has put himself
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on the map like that.'
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This setback would however, effect the faith of creationists in
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the story of Noah's ark, says Wieland. 'There is no reason why an
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8,000-year-old wooden vessel would have survived - in all probability it
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rotted away. But just because this is not the ark makes no difference -
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if I was still an evolutionist, I would not give that up when it was
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shown that the piltdown man was a fraud.'
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At the end of the day, why does it matter to Plimer and his
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fellow dons that some people choose to believe in the ark and in the
|
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|
literal truth of the Bible? Why should it be of any more harm or greater
|
||
|
significance than any other late 20th-century factoid - that the Kennedy
|
||
|
killing was a conspiracy, Elvis Presley is still alive or small green
|
||
|
men from Alpha Centauri amuse themselves by making patterns in English
|
||
|
cornfields?
|
||
|
'It matters because they want to teach creationism, not as
|
||
|
part of comparative religion where we would have no problems, but as
|
||
|
part of science,' say Ian Plimer. 'Creationists are lobbying to have
|
||
|
equal time in schools with evolution teaching, and we believe that is as
|
||
|
outrageous as giving witchdoctors equal time in medicine courses.'
|
||
|
Creationism is no longer a fringe cult, enjoyed in the privacy
|
||
|
of their own front parlours by wide-eyed Queensland Bible-bashers. Just
|
||
|
how pervasive the doctrine has become was illustrated a couple of months
|
||
|
ago, when the Australian Institute of Biology surveyed 4,255 biology
|
||
|
students at 17 universities around Australia and discovered that 12.6
|
||
|
percent, one in eight, believed that 'God created man pretty much in his
|
||
|
present form at one time in the past 10,000 years.'
|
||
|
John Skidmore, an associate professor at the University of
|
||
|
Technology, Sydney, who was responsible for the survey, is at a loss to
|
||
|
explain the unexpectably high figure, nor can he account for the fact
|
||
|
his own university came out on top with 20 per cent of true believers.
|
||
|
'We do have more nursing students than science students in our biology
|
||
|
classes,' he says. How could that affect things? 'They are dumber, if
|
||
|
you look at their HSC scores.'
|
||
|
In spite of intensive lobbying by various creationist groups,
|
||
|
Queensland is the only state where creationism is officially permitted
|
||
|
to be taught in State schools as part of the science curriculum - it is
|
||
|
banned in Victoria, and in NSW the former Education minister Terry
|
||
|
Metherell let it be known that anyone caught teaching it would be
|
||
|
dismissed. This has done little to discourage the creationists, and in
|
||
|
particular, Bruce Coleman, a research officer with NSW Legislative
|
||
|
Council member Fred Nile, who recently organised a public meeting in
|
||
|
Paramatta to call for the introduction of creation 'science' teaching in
|
||
|
government schools, and foreshadowed that Nile's Call to Australia Party
|
||
|
would introduce legislation to this effect in the NSW Parliament.
|
||
|
So if not in the schools, where is the renewed interest in
|
||
|
creationism coming from? Certainly some smaller evangelical religious
|
||
|
groups (Carl Wieland nominates the Baptists, Seventh-Day Adventists,
|
||
|
Salvation Army, Presbyterians and Church of Christ) teach creationism,
|
||
|
at least in some of their churches. Some muslims also believe in the ark
|
||
|
- in the Koran's version of the story, Noah had a fourth son who was
|
||
|
left behind to drown. But the two largest Australian Christian
|
||
|
churches, the Anglicans and the Roman Catholics, are strongly opposed to
|
||
|
it.
|
||
|
Father Brian Lucas, media spokesman for the Catholic archdiocese
|
||
|
of Sydney, says that there is no eveidence the ark ever existed - it was
|
||
|
' a theological story whose real purpose is to show the relationship
|
||
|
between God and man, in which the virtuous - Noah and his family - are
|
||
|
rewarded, and the wicked punished'. People who believed otherwise did
|
||
|
so out of 'ignorance or misunderstanding of something they learned at
|
||
|
Sunday school'.
|
||
|
As for creationism, 'It is absolutely contrary to everything the
|
||
|
Catholic church stands for. There is no conflict between scientific
|
||
|
truth and theological truth as they [ creationists ] are trying to make
|
||
|
out. We have no difficulty in accepting that the universe was created
|
||
|
in a big bang millions of years ago. We would ask, 'What made the Big
|
||
|
Bang?' and the answer is God'.
|
||
|
Probably the strongest influence in spreading the creationist
|
||
|
gospel is the Creation Science Foundation, based in Brisbane. in the
|
||
|
ten years since it was founded, it's propaganda mill has grown into a
|
||
|
sizeable corporation, with branches in all States, a monthly magazine
|
||
|
and a mailing list for books, and video cassettes in excess of 10,000.
|
||
|
The foundation has assets of more than $500,000 - it recently
|
||
|
completed, mortgage free, a two-storey headquarters building in the
|
||
|
suburb of Acacia Ridge, 'a throbbing, dynamic nerve centre from which
|
||
|
this minstry is daily touching hearts and lives'. It has a
|
||
|
sophisticated $40,000 computer mailing system to control the annual
|
||
|
turnover of more than $600,000. It operates a travelling roadshow from
|
||
|
a specially equipped bus which is currently touring more than fifty
|
||
|
towns in South Australia and Western Australia with its '11 tonnes of
|
||
|
gospel impact'.
|
||
|
Scientists such as Ian Plimer, says Carl Wieland, were 'hoping
|
||
|
to sink us along with the ark'. But for the time being at least, the
|
||
|
foundation has staved off the evil day by putting a clear distance
|
||
|
between itself and Allen Roberts's adventure in the mountains of Turkey.
|
||
|
Their mission continues, while Roberts retreats from the
|
||
|
limelight to lick his wounds.
|
||
|
The most fitting epitaph to the whole story is a quote from Mr
|
||
|
Ark himself, Ron Wyatt, of Nashville, Tennessee. 'The 40- to 50-year
|
||
|
history of the ark search has been a quagmire of misquotations, outright
|
||
|
lies, theft, fabrication and fraud.'
|
||
|
Ian Plimer and the Skeptics would second that. That syncline on
|
||
|
the outskirts of Tibooburra is all the proof they need.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * *
|