More proof that dragons are STILL living among us... this video is only a few months old....
Friends, Scientists tell as there are no such thing as dragons... yet the Bible tells us different.
In fact there have been many Dragon Sightings reported in only the past decade, which goes to prove these Scientists just don't know what they're talking about! If they spent more time reading the Bible, instead of 'educating' themselves with so-called 'knowledge', maybe they'd learn a thing of two...
Some information on Dragon Sightings...
In China they found a skull with horn that has been mistakenly labeled as one of the rare tyrannosaur with horn, also they found a mysterious carcass on a beach at Framboise, N.S., in July, 1976, that appeared to be a sea-dragon.
Throughout history, water dragons have often been sighted, with the most recent incidents dating back to the beginning of the twentieth century.
The most scientifically reliable description is that of Peter Karl van Esling, the director of The Hague Zoo, who gives an account of a water dragon sighted during a voyage to collect marine species in the Atlantic in 1860:
Another sight was reported to be seen the February 17, 1998 at Niagara falls Canada.
A great number of sighting of sea-dragon more commonly known as sea- serpent have been recorded; numbered among witnesses are such personages as scientists, priest and bishops.
In an article he wrote in 1817, the French-American scientist Rafinesque-Schmaltz wrote of a two hundred foot long sea-serpent seen by Mrs. W. Lee, in 1805, near Cape Breton and Newfoundland. She stated: "Its back was dark green and it stood in the water in flexuou
The first recorded sighting in Canadian water was on July 15th, 1825, in Halifax Harbour. It was seen by several people from entirely separate positions. They described it as having "a body as big as a tree trunk... The animal had about eight coils or humps to its body and was about sixty feet long."
It is most difficult to give correctly the dimensions of any object in the water. The head of the creature we set down at about six feet in length, and the portion of the neck which we saw, at the same; the extreme length, as before stated, at between 80 and 100 feet. The neck in thickness equaled the bole of a moderate-sized tree. The head and the neck of a dark brown or nearly black colour, streaked with white in irregular streaks.
A. MACLACHLAN, Lieutenant, ditto, August 5, 1824.
C. P. MALCOLM, Ensign, ditto, August 13, 1830.
B. O'NEAL LYSTER, Lieut. Artillery, June 7, 1816.
HENRY INCE, Ordnance Storekeeper at Halifax.
Checkmate, Scientists !
Friends, Scientists tell as there are no such thing as dragons... yet the Bible tells us different.
In fact there have been many Dragon Sightings reported in only the past decade, which goes to prove these Scientists just don't know what they're talking about! If they spent more time reading the Bible, instead of 'educating' themselves with so-called 'knowledge', maybe they'd learn a thing of two...
Some information on Dragon Sightings...
In China they found a skull with horn that has been mistakenly labeled as one of the rare tyrannosaur with horn, also they found a mysterious carcass on a beach at Framboise, N.S., in July, 1976, that appeared to be a sea-dragon.
Throughout history, water dragons have often been sighted, with the most recent incidents dating back to the beginning of the twentieth century.
The most scientifically reliable description is that of Peter Karl van Esling, the director of The Hague Zoo, who gives an account of a water dragon sighted during a voyage to collect marine species in the Atlantic in 1860:
We saw a gigantic reptile, bright blue and silver in colour. He swam gracefully around the ship before the sailors' eyes, and submerged himself without a splash. His eyes were enormous, with vertical pupils and an intelligent expression. They seemed luminous, but this effect could be due to the reflection from the setting sun.
His head was adorned with bright blue and green crests. Even though he disappeared under water and did not reappear, he appeared to measure some seven meters in length, and on his back they could make out something resembling a crest or fins. It was serpent-like, but the sailor thought they saw legs and claw.
His head was adorned with bright blue and green crests. Even though he disappeared under water and did not reappear, he appeared to measure some seven meters in length, and on his back they could make out something resembling a crest or fins. It was serpent-like, but the sailor thought they saw legs and claw.
A great number of sighting of sea-dragon more commonly known as sea- serpent have been recorded; numbered among witnesses are such personages as scientists, priest and bishops.
In an article he wrote in 1817, the French-American scientist Rafinesque-Schmaltz wrote of a two hundred foot long sea-serpent seen by Mrs. W. Lee, in 1805, near Cape Breton and Newfoundland. She stated: "Its back was dark green and it stood in the water in flexuou
The first recorded sighting in Canadian water was on July 15th, 1825, in Halifax Harbour. It was seen by several people from entirely separate positions. They described it as having "a body as big as a tree trunk... The animal had about eight coils or humps to its body and was about sixty feet long."
A similar creature was seen the next summer by William Warburton, south of Newfoundland.
On May 15th, 1833, in Mahone Bay, forty miles west of Halifax, three officers and two enlisted men of Her Majesty's Navy were relaxing on the deck of a fishing boat when they sighted at a distance of one hundred and fifty to two hundred yards:
. . . the head and the neck of some denizen of the deep, precisely like those of a common snake, in the act of swimming, the head so far elevated and thrown forward by the curve of the neck as to enable us to see the water under and beyond it. The creature rapidly passed, leaving a regular wake, from the commencement of which, to the forepart, which was out of water, we judged its length to be about 80 feet; and this within rather than beyond the mark . . .On May 15th, 1833, in Mahone Bay, forty miles west of Halifax, three officers and two enlisted men of Her Majesty's Navy were relaxing on the deck of a fishing boat when they sighted at a distance of one hundred and fifty to two hundred yards:
It is most difficult to give correctly the dimensions of any object in the water. The head of the creature we set down at about six feet in length, and the portion of the neck which we saw, at the same; the extreme length, as before stated, at between 80 and 100 feet. The neck in thickness equaled the bole of a moderate-sized tree. The head and the neck of a dark brown or nearly black colour, streaked with white in irregular streaks.
The five principal witnesses signed with their names, ranks, and dates on which they received their commissions:
W. SULLIVAN, Captain, Rifle Brigade, June 21, 1831. A. MACLACHLAN, Lieutenant, ditto, August 5, 1824.
C. P. MALCOLM, Ensign, ditto, August 13, 1830.
B. O'NEAL LYSTER, Lieut. Artillery, June 7, 1816.
HENRY INCE, Ordnance Storekeeper at Halifax.
Checkmate, Scientists !
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