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- <text id=93TT2005>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: Phony Arkaeology
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 51
- Phony Arkaeology
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a pseudo documentary, CBS falls victim to a hoaxer
- </p>
- <p>By LEON JAROFF--With reporting by William Tynan/New York
- </p>
- <p> "This piece of wood is so precious--and a gift from God."
- These moving words were spoken reverently by George Jammal
- as he displayed the relic that he said had come from Noah's
- ark. His appearance was one of the highlights of The Incredible
- Discovery of Noah's Ark, a two-hour prime-time special that
- aired on CBS in February. What the network didn't know--and
- didn't bother to find out--was that Jammal was a hoaxer and
- that large segments of its program were based on blatant and
- ludicrous pseudo science.
- </p>
- <p> Jammal had obtained the wood, he unblinkingly told the network
- audience, during a 1984 search for Noah's ark on snow-covered
- Mount Ararat in Turkey. With his companion "Vladimir," he had
- crawled through a hole in the ice into a wooden structure. "We
- got very excited when we saw part of this room was made into
- pens, like places where you keep animals," he recalled. "We
- knew then that we had found the ark!" To prove he had been in
- the fabled vessel, Jammal hacked out a chunk of wood.
- </p>
- <p> Then, he went on, tragedy struck. As Vladimir backed up taking
- photos of Jam mal and the site, "he fell, and that made some
- noise, and there was an avalanche...and that is where he
- died." The film was lost, and Jammal was so distraught, he had
- been unable to tell his story--until now.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Jammal is an actor who has been telling versions of
- this story for years but has never been on Mount Ararat. Vladimir
- is a fictitious character, and the supposedly venerable hunk
- of "ark" wood is a piece of contemporary pine Jammal soaked
- in juices and baked in the oven of his Long Beach, California,
- home.
- </p>
- <p> The prank apparently fooled Utah-based Sun International Pictures,
- which produced the show and sold it to CBS. But Jammal's tall
- tale was not the only misleading part of the special. Sun filled
- the two hours with a mixture of fact, conjecture, fantasy and
- arrant nonsense, while offering no clues as to which was which.
- "Eyewitnesses" who claimed to have seen or even touched the
- ark paraded in front of the camera. Unfortunately, the audience
- was told, an earthquake, attacks by terrorists, the Russian
- Revolution and other inopportune events had frustrated various
- attempts over the years to bring back clear pictures or other
- definitive proof of the ark's existence.
- </p>
- <p> Actor Darren McGavin, host of the special, called it "an archaeological
- quest." Indeed, one conventional archaeologist and a few other
- skeptics were allowed a sentence or two expressing doubt about
- the reality of the ark and the Deluge. But their views were
- quickly swept away by another deluge--of dubious testimony
- by "experts," many of them creationists who take the Bible's
- revelations literally and reject much of modern science.
- </p>
- <p> Without presenting evidence, these experts, most of them unknowns,
- made some startling claims. Among them:
- </p>
- <p>-- Biblical-era people developed batteries, used electroplating
- and benefited from air conditioning.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Deluge occurred when water in subterranean chambers burst
- through the earth's surface with an energy exceeding "the explosion
- of 10 billion hydrogen bombs."
- </p>
- <p>-- Fossils of animals "buried in swimming positions" and "fish
- found in positions of terror, fins extended and eyes bulging,"
- provided proof of the Deluge.
- </p>
- <p> Host McGavin acted impressed: These demonstrations "support
- the biblical story of the Deluge in every detail." One viewer
- who had good reason to doubt that statement--and many others--was Gerald La rue, a professor emeritus of biblical history
- and archaeology at the University of Southern California. A
- member of the Skeptics Society, an organization devoted to investigating
- pseudo science, Larue had been interviewed for an earlier Sun
- In ternational production and, after seeing that show, felt
- he had been set up as a straw man. It inspired him to coach
- George Jammal, an acquaintance, to perpetrate the hoax, intended
- to expose the shoddy research of Sun International. "Carbon-14
- testing would have revealed that the wood was a modern forgery,"
- says Larue.
- </p>
- <p> Frank Zindler, a Columbus, Ohio, biologist and biblical scholar,
- was furious after seeing the special. He had been asked to appear
- in a subsequent Sun International production called Ancient
- Secrets of the Bible II, which aired on CBS in May. Zindler
- backed out of his taping appointment and fired off a letter
- to CBS, calling the ark program "an attempt to show that modern
- science is wrong and Bronze Age mythology is correct." Earlier,
- Zindler began having qualms about his interview when he received
- instructions from Sun International revealing that "most of
- the pro-con arguments are pre-scripted and are already approved
- by the CBS-TV network."
- </p>
- <p> CBS defends its role. "When we bought the special," says a spokeswoman,
- "it was as an entertainment special, not a documentary." Says
- Sun International executive producer Charles E. Sellier: "We
- just presented a variety of people saying the different things
- they knew about Noah's ark." That excuse will hardly mollify
- discriminating TV viewers. And it will not defuse the anger
- of archaeologists like Richard Fox, of the University of South
- Dakota. Writing in the current edition of Free Inquiry, a secular
- humanist publication, Fox charges, "The program abused my profession
- and insulted its practitioners. And CBS is responsible."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-