Yes, he does. The Ark of the Coord, believed to have spent the past 83 years in the state after being excavated by a Marshall College professor of archeology, screened by PBS & # 39; Antiques Roadshow.
James Supp of Coradoado Trading Co, Tucson, Arizona and Coeur d & # 39; Alene, Idaho, mimicking the one-faith religion, used to transport the Ten Commandments, would fetch between $ 80,000 to $ 120,000 at auction. Supp called that "a very conservative measure." Any festival that holds the Ark before it is believed to be invincible, many foreign governments would be interested in getting it.
"No," said an unarmed civilian now aboard the ship, who has been dubbed "radio to God," and has been able to dispose of waste in all states. "Not bad with hot glue and spray paint."
The ship was brought by a private citizen to Sacramento & # 39; s Crocker Art Museum for an event at the Antiques Roadshow last May. An anonymous Ark owner says his father, an engineer in Industrial Light and Magic of Marin County, California, discovered it sometime in the early 1980s. Essentially, it does not contain the remains of the ten commandments; the current owner says he was used to store clothes.
The ship is believed to have been looted at Solomon's temple in Jerusalem in 980 BCE by the invading forces of Egypt's Paroah Shishak. Dr. Henry Jones, Jr. he came back after a dig outside Cairo in 1936. Jones & # 39; s discovery was revealed 45 years later in the 1981 documentary Passengers of a Lost Ship, the filmmakers requested that the United States government secretly keep the Ark in a large storage area.
Aside from being one of the most important works of Abraham's religion, the Ark was never placed in public, probably because of its questioning. Germany's competitive tour briefly claimed its identity, but its leader, France's Dr Rene Belloq disappeared in a mysterious manner. He was last seen on a remote island near Crete.