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  • [music playing]

  • NARRATOR: In the lower Jordan River Valley, 8 miles north

  • of the Dead Sea, a distinct ridge rises from the landscape.

  • But this is no ordinary ridge because buried under layers

  • of dirt and rock are the ruins of an ancient city that

  • dates back almost 4,000 years.

  • Modern archaeologists have named the site Tall el-Hammam.

  • When you look at Tall el-Hammam

  • from satellite imagery, it's long and it's narrow.

  • It's about a mile from end to end.

  • We believe that as many as 50,000

  • people occupied the city.

  • NARRATOR: According to experts, Tall el-Hammam

  • is shrouded in mystery.

  • We don't know what it was named in ancient times

  • or who lived there.

  • But in recent years, some archaeologists

  • have theorized that Tall el-Hammam is actually the ruins

  • of the Biblical city of Sodom.

  • AMIR HUSSAIN: In Genesis, you have these cities,

  • Sodom and Gomorrah.

  • And there's wickedness.

  • There's inequity in the city.

  • But then God decides, no, this city is

  • doing horrible kinds of things.

  • So I'm literally going to rain fire, sulfur down.

  • I'm going to destroy this city.

  • [music playing]

  • STEVEN COLLINS: God said, enough is enough.

  • Fire and burning stone came forth out of the heavens

  • from Yahweh and consumed the city.

  • [roaring flames]

  • In fact, the Bible says that every person,

  • crop, plant, tree, twig, anything that was living

  • was destroyed.

  • [crackling flames]

  • The Sodom and Gomorrah story is fascinating in that it's

  • meant to be a metaphor, an understanding of,

  • oh, when human beings don't do what they should do,

  • here's what God does to destroy us.

  • It's God's power being manifested.

  • It's an act of God.

  • [music playing]

  • NARRATOR: The destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah

  • has long been associated with the wrath of God.

  • Until recently, many scholars thought

  • that the story was only a myth.

  • So why do some experts now believe

  • that Tall el-Hammam could be the remains of the city of Sodom?

  • There is more geographical data in the Biblical text

  • for the location of Sodom than there

  • is for any other Biblical site.

  • The Bible was very, very clear that it was

  • north and east of the Dead Sea.

  • And it was very clear that it was east of Jerusalem.

  • And Tall el-Hammam matches geographics of the text.

  • It matches the time frame of the text.

  • It matches all the possible descriptions

  • as the text describes it.

  • NARRATOR: The idea that Tall el-Hammam

  • matches the location of Sodom in the Bible is intriguing.

  • [scraping]

  • And researchers also claim that there is physical evidence

  • on site that confirms the Biblical description

  • of Sodom's destruction.

  • The actual destruction event is recorded in just two verses

  • in Genesis, Chapter 19, Verses 24 and 25, where it talks

  • about the fact that rock and fire came down from the Heavens

  • and destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah.

  • One theory is that an incoming meteor

  • or meteor fragment exploded over the north end of the Dead Sea--

  • [explosion]

  • --and destroyed Tall el-Hammam.

  • There are numerous proxies that give

  • strong indication that an air burst

  • or impact event have occurred.

  • The first is the evidence of thermal damage

  • that's represented through melted building materials

  • and partially melted pottery fragments.

  • The second is the appearance and occurrence of microspherules--

  • very, very tiny spherical-shaped melted pieces

  • of mineral grains and sands.

  • And the third is a high concentration

  • of rare Earth elements.

  • Rare Earth elements are very common in asteroids,

  • not so common on the Earth.

  • What's interesting is that the middle layer of Tall Hammam

  • has a really high salt concentration.

  • It's so salty that a lot of times we

  • excavate pottery that's just coated

  • with thick salt crystals.

  • That's pretty unusual.

  • Why is that layer so salty?

  • Well, it's the same salt as found in the Dead Sea, probably

  • because this air-burst event--

  • [explosion]

  • --pushed a massive amount of dirt, water,

  • and salt over the landscape.

  • [music playing]

  • NARRATOR: A meteor explosion in the sky?

  • If Tall el-Hammam really was Sodom,

  • could such an explosion be the reason

  • why the city is now buried in dirt that has

  • a high concentration of salt?

  • Some experts believe the answer is yes.

  • And they point to the Biblical story

  • for further evidence of the connection

  • between the destruction of Sodom and salt.

  • The story of Sodom essentially picks up in Genesis 19,

  • where you have these two angels that

  • look like men who travel down to visit Lot,

  • who's living down in Sodom.

  • And Lot shows them tremendous hospitality.

  • You're supposed to be kind to immigrants.

  • You're supposed to be kind to foreigners, as Lot has done.

  • God has decided to destroy the city because of its wickedness.

  • So the angels grab Lot and his family.

  • And as they're leaving Sodom, the angels

  • give them the command, don't even look back.

  • And then you have this fascinating detail,

  • where it says that Lot's wife turned and look back.

  • And she turned into a pillar of salt.

  • NARRATOR: What could be the significance of Lot's wife

  • turning into a pillar of salt?

  • Does this detail from the story support the theory

  • that a meteor explosion in the sky

  • buried Sodom in dirt and salt?

  • Perhaps.

  • But is a meteor explosion a natural event,

  • or is it an act of God?

  • There has been a lot of question

  • about fire and brimstone coming down from the Heavens, right?

  • This is one of these unexplained mysteries.

  • [explosion]

  • And there have been a lot of theories.

  • And this probably has something to do with wanting

  • evidence that proves faith.

  • A lot of people believe in these stories.

  • And archaeology can confirm them.

  • I think from a point of view of science,

  • as we look at the Biblical text, and we look at the statement

  • of this was fire and burning stone from God out

  • of the Heavens, if such an event actually

  • occurred, would it have left some evidences around?

  • Well, of course, yes.

  • That's all confirmed by the science.

  • Now, science can't tell me one way or the other

  • whether it's an act of God.

  • But the event is confirmed.

[music playing]

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