At Nueva Beach – Evidence of the Red Sea Crossing, Melted Beach

Archaeologist: Here you can see the beach where the waters opened up to the Red Sea. We’re standing at the exact spot. Right in front of us here is a melted beach, where the sand and the stones were literally melted together like concrete by the pillar of fire.

Interviewer: Really?

Archaeologist: This is not loose sand. This is a melted beach which the pillar of fire created when it stood here.

Interviewer: Separating the Egyptian army from the fleeing Israelites Red Sea crossing.

Archaeologist: Yeah. Again, this is more evidence that confirms the location here. My goodness. Here it is. You see this rock is just infused in with the sand and the little rocks there. This is all hardened. This is like concrete.

Interviewer: There’s the evidence right there. It’s solid.

Archaeologist: Right. A piece of it was broken off for us to look at. You can see it close here. All the little rocks and the sand, they’re melted together, infused by the pillar of fire. This goes on for some ways. This isn’t just one little spot.

Ron Wyatt Diving at the Red Sea Crossing Finding Various Human Remains in the Water

Ron Wyatt went scuba diving out there at the Red Sea Crossing and various evidence has been found in the water. You can see human femur bone that is coral encrusted which would be something you would expect. On the left here, we see a normal one. On the right, we see the coral encrusted femur from one of the soldiers. On the top left, you see a human rib cage stuck in the coral. Here’s another round chariot wheel with a raised center hub and then spokes going out. It’s got a round shape to it. Again, it’s covered in coral.

Interviewer: Some people say that these are just modern shipwrecks in the Red Sea.

Evidence of Chariot Wheels in the Coral at Red Sea Crossing

Archaeologist: Some people have said that, but again, this agrees totally with the design of the chariot wheels. With the raised center hub and using metal detectors, there is metal in the center. There are spokes going out. Evidence this is a four-spoke chariot wheel with three spokes left. Four-spoke wheels, six-spoke and eight-spoke chariot wheels are found here. Of course, more evidence found using the metal detector like he’s demonstrating here, all the hubs here contain metal. That is the design of the Egyptian chariot wheel with the metal center hub. Here is a gold-plated wheel. There were 600-choice chariot used in the exodus, we’re told, so you would expect to find 1,200 chariot wheels here with gold at the Red Sea Crossing. This one is special. It’s gold-plated. Two or three of these were found by Mr. Wyatt.

Now, we see a more shallow area where the Red Sea Crossing took place. It’s shallower here compared to the north and compared to the south. It’s still deep. It has to be a deep area. It’s 2,800 feet deep, but that gives you a 4% grade, which is manageable. There in the Saudi waters, Vika Pantin went scuba diving, and she found evidence of this beautiful chariot wheel in the Saudi Arabian waters. So you have chariot parts on the Egyptian side, chariot parts on the Saudi Arabian side.

New Divers Film Chariot Wheels at the Red Sea Crossing

Divers: When we dive and when we film at an available location, we look for certain structures, and you try to look for 90-degree angles or circular objects, chariot wheel like structures. So that is what you scan for, so to speak, when you dive. There are situations where you see something that looks like an axle, a hub, evidence something that looks like a chariot wheel, and you say to yourself, this is not a coral reef. This is a coral growth on an artifact. That is what’s different to me when I compare corals at other locations around the world.

Narrator: Since the earliest explorations at Nueva, one distinctive type of formation has often been identified on the seafloor. A slender, table-like structure, sometimes standing on end, with a coral-encrusted base, a straight shaft, and a circular top.

Divers: It’s a 90-degree angle, a right angle, between something that looks like an axle and the chariot wheel. You can see this evidence in different varieties, and it looks very different from normal coral growth. It is like a man-made structure with a coral growth on it.

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