Noah's Ark (Hebrew: תיבת נח, Teyvat Noaḥ in Classical Hebrew) is a vessel appearing in the Book of Genesis (chapters 6–9) and the Quran (surahs Hud and Al-Mu’minoon). These narratives describe the construction of a large, seagoing ark by the Patriarch Noah at God's command to save himself, his family, and the world's animals from the worldwide deluge of the Great Flood.
In the narrative of the ark, God sees the wickedness of man and is grieved by his creation, resolving to send a great flood to cleanse the Earth. However, God chooses a man named Noah and "counted it righteous to him" to live and preserve mankind through Noah's family. God then proceeds to give Noah detailed instructions on how to build the ark. When Noah and the animals are safe on board, God sends the Flood, which rises until all the mountains are covered and all life on Earth is destroyed. At the height of the flood, the ark rests on mountaintops, before the waters recede and dry land reappears. Noah, his family, and the animals leave the ark to repopulate the Earth. God places a symbolic rainbow in the sky and makes a covenant with Noah and all living things, by which he vows to never again send a flood to destroy the Earth.
Noah ( /ˈnoʊ.ə/; or Noé, Noach; Hebrew: נֹחַ, נוֹחַ, Modern Noaẖ Tiberian Nōăḥ; Arabic: نُوح Nūḥ; Ancient Greek: Νῶε) was the tenth and last of the antediluvian Patriarchs. The story of Noah and the ark is told in chapters 6–9 of the book of Genesis, which is followed by the story of the Curse of Ham. Outside Genesis his name is mentioned in Ezekiel, Isaiah and Chronicles. He was the subject of much elaboration in later Abrahamic traditions, including the Qur'an.
Noah was the tenth of the pre-Flood Patriarchs. His father Lamech named him nûaḥ (the final ḥ is a more gutteral sound than the English h), saying, "This same shall comfort us in our work and in the toil of our hands, which cometh from the ground which the LORD hath cursed." This connects the future patriarch's name with nāḥam, "comfort", but it seems better related to the word nûaḥ, meaning "rest", and is more a play on words than a true etymology.
In his five hundredth year Noah had three sons, Shem, Ham and Japheth. In his six hundredth year God, saddened at the wickedness of mankind, sent a great deluge to destroy all life, but because Noah was "righteous in his generation" God instructed him to build an ark and save a remnant of life. After the Flood Noah offered a sacrifice (the word nihoah, describing the "pleasant" odour of the sacrifice, is yet another pun on Noah's name) and entered into a covenant with God regulating the shedding of blood (i.e., mankind's permnission to kill under regulated circumstances). After this he became "the first tiller of the soil", planted a vineyard, and drank the wine, and fell asleep naked; Noah's son Ham saw his father naked and told his brothers, and Noah cursed Ham's son Canaan.
William Sanford "Bill" Nye (born November 27, 1955), popularly known as Bill Nye the Science Guy, is an American science educator, comedian, television host, actor, mechanical engineer, and scientist. He is best known as the host of the Disney/PBS children's science show Bill Nye the Science Guy (1993–1998) and for his many subsequent appearances in popular media as a science educator.
William Sanford Nye was born in Washington, D.C., the son of Jacqueline (née Jenkins; c. 1920–2000), a codebreaker during World War II, and Edwin Darby "Ned" Nye (died 1997), also a World War II veteran whose experience in a Japanese prisoner of war camp led him to become a sundial enthusiast. Nye is a fourth-generation Washington, D.C. resident on his father's side of the family. After attending Lafayette Elementary and Alice Deal Junior High in the city, he was accepted to the private Sidwell Friends School on a partial scholarship, graduating in 1973. He studied mechanical engineering at Cornell University, where one of his professors was Carl Sagan, and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 1977. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by The Johns Hopkins University in May 2008. In May 2011, Nye was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from Willamette University where he was the keynote speaker for that year's commencement exercises.
Ronald Eldon Wyatt (1933 – August 4, 1999) was an adventurer and former nurse anaesthetist noted for advocating the Durupınar site as the site of Noah's Ark, among other Bible-related pseudoarchaeology. His claims were dismissed by scientists, historians, biblical scholars, and even by leaders in his own Seventh-day Adventist Church, but his work continues to have a following among some fundamentalists and evangelicals.
Wyatt was as a nurse-anesthetist when in 1960 he saw a picture in Life Magazine of the Durupınar site, a boat-like shape on a mountain near Mount Ararat. The resulting widespread speculation in evangelical Christian circles that this might be Noah's Ark started Wyatt on his career as an amateur archaeologist. From 1977 until his death in 1999 he made over one hundred trips to the Middle East, his interests widening to take in a wide variety of references from the Old and New Testaments.
By the time of his death on August 4, 1999, his claimed discoveries included:
While Wyatt won a devoted following from the ranks of fundamentalist Christians seeking tangible evidence of the literal truth of the Bible, his credibility was disputed, often bitterly, by professional archaeologists and biblical scholars. The Garden Tomb Association of Jerusalem state in a letter they issue to visitors on request:
As Nibiru Aproached in the skies
The Annunnaki knew
About a Tidal wave
That was about
To swept away earth
Mankind was about to be extinct
The Annunnaki gathered
And vowed to let mankind
Face their fate alone
They flew like birds
To the skies in their spaceships
And waited the waters calm down
Noah's Ark
Was a spaceship in the sky
Noah's Ark
Chosen to survive
Noah's Ark
Many were left to die
Noah's Ark
Was a new start
Hungry groups of nephilin
Landed on mountain of salvation
They searched for survivors
For their own good
Animals, man and woman,
Reunited on the mountain
They were taught in all crafts that time
Noah's Ark
Was a spaceship in the sky
Noah's Ark
Chosen to survive
Noah's Ark
Many were left to die
Noah's Ark
Thank you God for this fine day
And bless all the children all over the world
Thank you for the plants and the animals
Oh bring me sweet dreams tonight
And help me be good tomorrow
Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all of his animals and took me away
Oh Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all of his animals and took me away
Thank you God for this fine fine day
And bless all of the children of the world
And thank you for the plants and the animals
And bring me sweet dreams tonight
And help me be good tomorrow
Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all of his animals, He took me away
Oh Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all his animals, and he took me away
Thank you God for this, oh, this fine day
Bless all of the children of the world
Thank you for the plants and the animals
And bring me sweet dreams tonight
And help me be good tomorrow
Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all his animals and he took me away
Noah's ark came to my house one day
With all his animals and he took me away
Thank you for the plants and the animals
Bring me sweet dreams tonight
And help me be good tomorrow
And help me be good tomorrow
Bring me, bring me sweet dreams
I know a song
I know a, know a s, know a s, know a song
I know a song
I know a, know a s, know a s, know a song
To sing,
On this dark night.
On this dark, dark, dark, dark, dark night
On this dark night.
On this dark, dark, dark, dark, dark night
It's the song..
of love.
It's the song..
of love.
It's the song..
of love.
I know a song
I know a, know a s, know a s, know a song
I know a song
I know a, know a s, know a s, know a song
to sing.
On this dark night
On this dark, dark, dark, dark, dark night
On this dark night
On this dark, dark, dark, dark, dark night
It's the song..
of love.
It's the song..
of love.
It's the song..
the wise man built his home on the rock
the foolish man build his house on the sand
the foolish man house is washed away
how can the wiseman build his house on the sand?
how can the wise man build the house on the sand
with no foundation
on the sand
whohohooyy
on the sand
noahs ark by the will of god
noah build his ark by the will of god
boss
I weren't expecting no rainbows
Noah told them cackling hens
I weren't considered no sailor
And I hope that I don't have to do this again
How many times can you fly out
And leave me with an open empty
Hand this time will be the last time
I send that little bird to find land
For days it just kept raining
Oh the rain just kept coming on down
I thought I'd never get a sign
And I thought for sure that I was gonna drown
Then yonder her she come then flying
Until that day I couldn't sing a note
It's hard to wait for information
And I can't wait to dock this old boat
If I ever get to heaven
I'll admit I doubted some
I'll tell them everything that happened
And ask them why it took so long
And if they find my tools and timber
That I used to build her strong
I hope the fools that do remember
How on a sea of hope and faith
We drifted home
I'm pretty sure that someone will be there to meet us
Noah told them chickens to their face
And as he looked out from the mountain
He could see what time would do to this old
Place(is everybody coming with me
It'll take a little time to settle in
I hope everyone forgives me
Because this took a little longer than I planned
You all hold on to one another
And you make damn sure that you don't drift apart
Then we'll truck on down this mountain
And we'll find a level place
To make a brand new start
Then the sun just kind of peeked out
It was juts enough to make them feel assured
And the only thing that noah kept repeating
Was that he sure was glad to see that little bird.
Hello it's good to see you it's been a long long time