wikipedia is not a very good source for scientific debates....
90% of Wikipedia medical entries are inaccurate, say experts | Daily Mail Online
BBC News - Trust your doctor, not Wikipedia, say scientists
Most Wikipedia entries about companies contain factual errors, study finds -- ScienceDaily
especially relating to christian bias, wikipedia is really bad....
Examples of religious Bias in Wikipedia
so anyway I would not be shocked that wikipedia would find error with biblical archaology, I would just question wikipedia's ability to relay factual information. Wikipedia is publically edited by people with no degrees required.
so see the logic here, a phd archaologist is questioned by an online web forum that uses people with no degrees whatsoever.
ron wyatt is the bomb. I love his work personally. now again if you don't listen to wikipedia or snopes or allow skeptical sources into your source stream you start to love all sorts of sources, kent hovind, ken ham, ron wyatt.
no one is perfect for sure, and they all make their own mistakes, but they are just sources.
they are not God.
"Excavations at the city of David have spanned parts of three centuries, beginning in 1867 with Charles Warren and continuing to the current excavations begun in 2007 by Doron Ben-Ami and Yana Tchekhanovets. Through the decades of excavation many features alluded to or explicitly mentioned in the Old Testament have been located. These include Hezekiah's water tunnel, the Siloam inscription, architectural remains of a large stone structure that some (for example, archaeologist Eilat Mazar) believe to be the palace of King David, Warren's Shaft, the Canaanite tunnel, the royal steward inscription,* the typical Israelite four-room house of Ahiel, Gihon Spring, the Spring and Pool Towers, tombs, the tenth-century BC retaining wall to David's palace known as the Stepped-Stone Structure, and much more. What is more, the high concentrations of ceramic storage jars found in the area (and at other locations mostly in the Judean territory) containing stamped impressions bearing the Hebrew words L'melech (LMLK, "belonging to the king")t testify to the city's location as the royal seat of Israel's and then Judah's government."- above quote from the popular handbook of biblical archaology by holden and geisler.
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