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Since the publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830, Mormon and non-Mormon archaeologists have attempted to find archaeological evidence to support it. Although historians, archaeologists, and those outside the religion who have examined the topic consider the book to be an anachronistic invention of Joseph Smith, many members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and other denominations of the Latter Day Saint movement believe that it describes ancient historical events in the Americas.
The Book of Mormon principally describes God's dealings with two civilizations in the Americas over the course of several hundred years. The book primarily deals with the Nephites and the Lamanites, who – it states – existed in the Americas from about 600 BC to about AD 400. It also deals with the rise and fall of the Jaredite nation, which the Book of Mormon says came from the Old World shortly after the confounding of the languages at the Tower of Babel. The Book of Mormon mentions several animals, plants, and technologies that are not substantiated by the archaeological record of the period 3100 BC to 400 AD in the Americas, constituting some of the most significant anachronisms in the Book of Mormon.[1][2][3][4]
Some early-20th century Mormons claimed various archaeological findings, such as place names and ruins of the Inca, Maya, Olmec, and other ancient American and Old World civilizations, as giving credence to the Book of Mormon record.[5] Many current believers, including the LDS Church, have no strong position on whether or how to attribute the people in the narrative to specific groups.[6]
Archaeology research in pre-Columbian Americas and the Book of Mormon
Numerous observers have suggested that the Book of Mormon appears to be a work of fiction that parallels others within the 19th-century "Mound Builder" genre that was pervasive at the time.[7][8][9][10][11][12] Some nineteenth-century archaeological finds (e.g., earth and timber fortifications and towns,[13] the use of a plaster-like cement,[14] ancient roads,[15] metal points and implements,[16] copper breastplates,[17] head-plates,[18] textiles,[19] pearls,[20] native North American inscriptions, North American elephant remains etc.) were well-publicized at the time of the publication of the Book of Mormon and there is incorporation of some of these ideas into the narrative. References are made in the Book of Mormon to then-current understanding of pre-Columbian civilizations, including the Formative Mesoamerican civilizations such as the (Pre-Classic) Olmec, Maya, and Zapotec.
Organizational statements regarding the Book of Mormon
Smithsonian Institution
For a period of time, the Smithsonian Institution sent a form letter to inquiring parties including a list of specific reasons Smithsonian archaeologists considered the Book of Mormon historically unlikely. In 1982, FARMS apologist John Sorenson published a critique of certain sections of the form letter and in 1995, he released a revised version suggesting the Smithsonian update their response. The critique addressed more recent interpretations, alternate translations, and new research on issues brought up in the form letter. In 1998, the Smithsonian revised the form letter and stated generally that Book of Mormon had not been used by the Smithsonian in any form of archaeological research. Terryl Givens speculates that the change in the statement was an effort to avoid controversy.[21][22]
National Geographic Society
The Institute for Religious Research posted on its website a 1998 letter from National Geographic Society that stated that the Society was unaware of any archaeological evidence that would support the Book of Mormon.[23] The letter is no longer posted on the National Geographic website.[24]
Anachronisms and archaeological findings
Critics of the Book of Mormon have argued that certain words and phrases in the book are anachronistic with archaeological findings. These relate to artifacts, animal, plant, or technology that critics believe did not exist in the Americas during the Book of Mormon time period (before 2500 BC to about 400 AD). The list below summarizes a few of the anachronistic criticisms in the Book of Mormon, as well as perspectives and rebuttals by Mormon apologists.
The Book of Mormon mentions horses in five incidences, and are portrayed as being in the forest upon first arrival of the Nephites, "raise(d)", "fed", "prepared" (in conjunction with chariots), used for food, and being "useful unto man".[25] Horses in the America are considered to have become extinct between 10,000 and 7,600 years ago,[26][27][28] and did not reappear there until the Spaniards brought them from Europe. Horses were re-introduced to the Americas (Caribbean) by Christopher Columbus in 1493 and to the American continent by Cortés in 1519.[29] Mormon archaeologist John L. Sorenson claims that there is fossil evidence that some New World horses may have survived the Pleistocene–Holocene transition,[30] though these findings are disputed by other Book of Mormon scholars.[31] Alternately, Mormon apologist Robert R. Bennett suggests that the word "horse" in the Book of Mormon may have referred to a different animal, such as a tapir.[32]
Elephants are mentioned once in the earliest Book of Mormon record c. 2500 BC in the Book of Ether. Critics argue that the archaeological record suggests that all elephant-like creatures became extinct in the New World around 10,000 BC. The source of this extinction is speculated to be the result of human predation, a significant climate change, or a combination of both factors.[33][34] Recent eDNA research of sediments indicates mammoths survived until at least 6600 BC in North America.[35] A small population of mammoths survived on St. Paul Island, Alaska, up until 3700 BC.[36]
Apologists deal with the "elephant" in much the same way as they treat the "horse" anachronism, countering with the following arguments:
- Various amateur archaeologists and Mormon authors have cited controversial evidence that North American mound builder cultures were familiar with the elephant. This evidence has long been a topic of debate with modern archaeologists concluding that the elephantine remains were improperly dated, misidentified, or openly fraudulent.[37]
Cattle and cows
There are five separate incidences of "cows" or "cattle" in the New World in the Book of Mormon, including verbiage that they were "raise(d)" and were "for the use of man" or "useful for the food of man",[38] and indicates that "cattle" and "cows" were not considered the same animal.[39] While the Book of Mormon may follow the common biblical precedent of referring to all domesticated animals as "cattle", there is no evidence that Old World cattle (members of the genus Bos) inhabited the New World prior to European contact in the 16th century AD.[40] Further, there is currently no archaeological evidence of American bison having been domesticated.[41] It is widely accepted that the only large mammals to be domesticated in the Americas were the llama and the alpaca and that no species of goats, deer, or sheep were fully domesticated before the arrival of the Europeans to the continent.
Some Mormon apologists believe that the term "cattle", as used in the Book of Mormon is more general and does not exclusively mean members of the genus Bos. Thus, they claim the term "cattle" may refer to mountain goats; llamas; or the ancestor of the American bison, Bison antiquus (of the sub family Bovinae).[42]
Sheep
"Sheep" are mentioned in the Book of Mormon metaphorically at various places in the Nephite record[43] but are conspicuously absent in the list of animals observed in the New World upon the arrival of the Nephites.[44] In one instance sheep are described as being possessed by the Jaredites in the Americas at c. 2300 BC.[45] Another verse mentions "lamb-skin" worn by enemy armies of robbers about their loins (c. 21 AD).[46] However, domesticated sheep are known to have been first introduced to the Americas during the second voyage of Columbus in 1493.[47]
Mormon apologists argue the following to deal with this anachronism:
- One apologist cites the discovery of some charred wool cloth in a grave during a dig in central Mexico in 1935.[48] However, the discovering archaeologists noted their uncertainty in determining if the grave was pre-Spanish.[49]
- Some suggest that the word "sheep" may refer to another species of animal that resembled sheep such as big horn sheep or llamas.[50] Critics point out that big horn sheep have never been domesticated by humans. Llamas and Alpacas are native to the Andes in South America.[51]
- The sheep referred to by the Jaredites, as the reference is not long after their arrival c. 2500 BC, is referring to Old World sheep as it is mentioned in the Book of Mormon that the Jaredites brought animals and birds with them,[52][53] and the reference to lamb-skins may refer to wild sheep that were hunted. No evidence of domesticated sheep has been found in the Americas prior to Columbus.[54]
Goats
"Goats" are mentioned three times in the Book of Mormon[55] placing them among the Nephites and the Jaredites (i.e., between 2500 BC and 400 AD). In two of the verses, "goats" are distinguished from "wild goats", indicating that there were at least two varieties, one of them possibly domesticated.
Domesticated goats are known to have been introduced on the American continent by Europeans in the 15th century,[47] 1000 years after the conclusion of the Book of Mormon, and nearly 2000 years after goats are last mentioned in the Book of Mormon. The aggressive mountain goat is indigenous to North America. There is no evidence that it was ever domesticated. Mormon Apologist Matthew Roper has countered these claims, pointing out that 16th-century Spanish friars used the word "goat" to refer to native Mesoamerican brocket deer.[56] There is no evidence that brocket deer were ever domesticated.
Swine
"Swine" are referred to twice in the Book of Mormon,[57][58] and states that the swine were "useful for the food of man" among the Jaredites.[58] There have not been any remains, references, artwork, tools, or any other evidence suggesting that swine were ever present in the pre-Columbian New World.[59]
Apologists note that peccaries (also known as javelinas), which bear a superficial resemblance to pigs and are in the same subfamily Suinae as swine, have been present in South America since prehistoric times.[60] Mormon authors advocating the original mound-builder setting for the Book of Mormon have similarly suggested North American peccaries (also called "wild pigs")[61] as the "swine" of the Jaredites.[62] The earliest scientific description of peccaries in the New World in Brazil in 1547 referred to them as "wild pigs".[63]
Though it has not been documented that peccaries were bred in captivity, it has been documented that peccaries were tamed, penned, and raised for food and ritual purposes in the Yucatán, Panama, the southern Caribbean, and Columbia at the time of the Conquest.[64] Archaeological remains of peccaries have been found in Mesoamerica from the Preclassic (or Formative) period up until immediately before Spanish contact.[65] Specifically, peccary remains have been found at Early Formative Olmec civilization sites,[66] which civilization Mormon apologists correlate to the Book of Mormon Jaredites.
Barley and wheat
"Barley" is mentioned three times and "wheat" once in the Book of Mormon narrative with the ground being "tilled" to plant barley and wheat at one geographical location, in the 1st and 2nd century BC according to Book of Mormon chronology.[67] The introduction of domesticated modern barley and wheat to the New World was made by Europeans after 1492.[68] The Book of Mormon claims that non-specific "seeds" were brought from the land of Jerusalem and planted on arrival in the New World and produced a successful yield.[69] To date, the existing evidence suggests that the introduction of Old World flora and fauna to the American continent happened during the Columbian exchange.[70]
FARMS scholar Robert Bennett argues the following to deal with this anachronism:
- That the words "barley" and "wheat" in the Book of Mormon may actually be referring to other crops in the Americas, such as Hordeum pusillum.[71][72] Most Hordeum pusillum has been found in Iowa, dating back to around 2,500 years ago.[73]
- That these words may refer to genuine varieties of New World barley and wheat, which are as yet undiscovered in the archaeological record.
- That the Norse, after reaching North America, claimed to have found what they called "self-sown wheat".[74]
Bennett states:
Research on this matter supports two possible explanations. First, the terms barley and wheat, as used in the Book of Mormon, may refer to certain other New World crop plants that were given Old World designations; and second, the terms may refer to genuine varieties of New World barley and wheat. For example, the Spanish called the fruit of the prickly pear cactus a "fig," and emigrants from England called maize "corn," an English term referring to grains in general. A similar practice may have been employed when Book of Mormon people encountered New World plant species for the first time.[75]
Bennett describes the use of Hordeum pusillum, also known as "little barley", a species of grass native to the Americas. The seeds are edible, and this plant was part of the pre-Columbian Eastern Agricultural Complex of cultivated plants used by Native Americans. Hordeum pusillum was unknown in Mesoamerica, where there is no evidence of pre-Columbian barley cultivation. Evidence exists that this plant was domesticated in North America in the Woodland periods contemporary with mound-builder societies (early centuries AD) and has been carbon-dated to 2,500 years ago.[76][77][78] Barley samples that date to 900 AD were also found in Phoenix, Arizona, and samples from Southern Illinois date between 1 and 900 AD.[79]
Silk
The Book of Mormon mentions the use of "silk" in the New World four times.[80] "Silk" ordinarily refers to material that is created from the cocoon of one of several Asian moths, predominantly Bombyx mori; this type of silk was unknown in pre-Columbian America.
Mormon scholar John L. Sorenson documents several materials which were used in Mesoamerica to make fine cloth equivalent to silk, some of which the Spanish actually called "silk" upon their arrival, including the fiber (kapok) from the seed pods of the ceiba tree, the cocoons of wild moths, the fibers of silkgrass (Achmea magdalenae), the leaves of the wild pineapple plant, and the fine hair of the underbelly of rabbits.[81] He alleges that the inhabitants of Mexico used the fiber spun by a wild silkworm to create a fabric.[82]
The Aztecs used a silk material taken from nests made by two indigenous insects, the moth Eucheira socialis and the butterfly Gloveria psidii.[83][84] The nests were cut and pieced together to make a fabric, rather than extracting and spinning the fiber as in modern silk. Spinning of silk from what are thought to be the same insects has been reported in more recent times, though its use in pre-Columbian times has been debated.[85]
Old World artifacts and products
Chariots or wheeled vehicles
The Book of Mormon contains two accounts of "chariots" being used in the New World.[86]
Critics argue that there is no archaeological evidence to support the use of wheeled vehicles in Mesoamerica, especially since many parts of ancient Mesoamerica were not suitable for wheeled transport. Clark Wissler, the Curator of Ethnography at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, noted: "we see that the prevailing mode of land transport in the New World was by human carrier. The wheel was unknown in pre-Columbian times."[87]
A comparison of the South American Inca civilization to Mesoamerican civilizations shows the same lack of wheeled vehicles. Although the Incas used a vast network of paved roads, these roads are so rough, steep, and narrow that they appear to be unsuitable for wheeled use. Bridges that the Inca people built, and even continue to use and maintain today in some remote areas, are straw-rope bridges so narrow (about 2–3 feet wide) that no wheeled vehicle can fit. Inca roads were used mainly by chaski message runners and llama caravans.
Some Mormon apologists argue the following to deal with this anachronism:
- One apologist has suggested that the "chariots" mentioned in the Book of Mormon might refer to mythic or cultic wheeled vehicles.[88]
- Some apologists point out that pre-Columbian wheeled toys have been found in Mesoamerica, indicating that the wheel was known by ancient American peoples.[89][90] Some of these wheeled toys were referred to by Smithsonian archaeologist William Henry Holmes and archaeologist Désiré Charnay as "chariots".[91][92]
- One Mormon apologist argues that few chariot fragments have been found in the Middle East dating to Biblical times (apart from the disassembled chariots found in Tutankhamun's tomb), and therefore wheeled chariots did exist in the Book of Mormon timeframe and it would not be unreasonable to assume that archaeologists have not yet discovered any evidence of them.[93]
- Critics counter that although few fragments of chariots have been found in the Middle East, there are many images of ancient chariots on pottery and frescoes and in many sculptures of Mediterranean origin, thus confirming their existence in those societies. The absence of these images among pre-Columbian artwork found in the New World (with the exception of Pre-Columbian wheeled toys), they state, does not support the existence of Old World–style chariots in the New World.
- Mormon scholar Brant Gardner has asserted that the Book of Mormon "chariot' may be a palanquin or litter vehicle,[94] and apologist Michael Ash generally speculates that the word "chariot" may refer to a non-wheeled vehicle.[95]
Iron and steel
"Steel" and "iron" are mentioned several times in the Book of Mormon.[96] No evidence of Pre-Columbian iron smelting has ever been found anywhere in the Western Hemisphere and all examples of iron artifacts are fabricated from meteoric iron.
Some limited metalworking was independently discovered by ancient American cultures, however. The Old Copper cultures around the Great Lakes are among the oldest metal-workers in human history due the region containing the world's largest native copper deposit.[97] Starting 8000 years ago, these peoples extracted and cold-worked native copper into a vast array of tools.[98] By 3000 years ago, most tools were no longer produced from copper due to the superior properties of stone tools,[99] though awls continued to be produced and used for thousands more years.[100] Due to the abundance of high quality stone and copper, the Great Lakes cultures never had a need to develop smelting or alloying. Not surprisingly due to the material properties of pure copper, bladed tools were rare, though a few examples have been recovered on Isle Royale and around Lake Superior.[101] Copper mined around Lake Superior was traded extensively and as a result can be found in Pre-Columbian sites all across North America.[102][103]
Mesoamerican cultures began extracting copper ore and smelting it 1400 years ago, including independently discovering the lost-wax casting method. Starting 800 years ago, these cultures experimented with alloying copper, gold, and silver. Nearly all examples of metalworking from this region are ornamental prestige pieces. All iron artifacts were prestige objects that were cold-worked from meteoric iron and were formed into mirrors, beads, hammers, and possibly magnetic compasses.
The Inca Empire independently discovered how to smelt and alloy copper into bronze, which it worked into a wide range of tools, including bolas, plumb bobs, chisels, gravers, pry bars, tweezers, needles, plates, fish hooks, spatulas, ladles, knives (tumi), bells, breastplates, lime spoons, mace heads, ear spools, bowls, cloak pins (tupus), axes, and foot plow adzes. Additionally, South American cultures regularly worked gold and other precious metals.
Between 2004 and 2007, a Purdue University archaeologist, Kevin J. Vaughn, discovered a 2000-year-old hematite mine near Nazca, Peru. Although hematite is today mined as an iron ore, Vaughn believes that the hematite was then being mined for use as red pigment. There are also numerous excavations that included iron minerals.[104] He noted:
Even though ancient Andean people smelted some metals, such as copper, they never smelted iron like they did in the Old World .... Metals were used for a variety of tools in the Old World, such as weapons, while in the Americas, metals were used as prestige goods for the wealthy elite.[105]
After a sufficient amount of archeological evidence showed that there was no iron working among Pre-Columbian native peoples, some apologists in the early 2000s began to counter that the word "steel" in the Book of Mormon may instead refer to a hardened metal other than iron.[106] This argument follows from the fact that the Book of Mormon refers to certain Old World articles made of "steel".[107] Similar "steel" articles mentioned in the King James Version of the Bible (KJV) are actually hardened copper.[108] It has been demonstrated that much of the terminology of the Book of Mormon parallels the language of the KJV.[109]
Metal swords, which had "rusted"
The Book of Mormon makes numerous references to "swords" and their use in battle.[110] When the remnants of the Jaredites' final battle were discovered, the Book of Mormon narrative states that some swords were collected and "the hilts thereof have perished, and the blades thereof were cankered with rust."[111] After it became clear that no Pre-Columbian iron or bronze swords existed, some apologists in the 1990s [112] began to argue that the references to swords may instead refer to a number of weapons such as the macuahuitl, a war club lined with obsidian blades that was used by the Aztecs.[113]
Cimeters
"Cimeters" are mentioned in eight instances in the Book of Mormon stretching from approximately 500 BC to 51 BC.[114] Critics argue this existed hundreds of years before the term "scimitar" was coined. The word "cimiter" is considered an anachronism since the word was never used by the Hebrews (from which the Book of Mormon peoples came) or any other civilization prior to 450 AD.[115] The word 'cimeterre' is found in the 1661 English dictionary Glossographia and is defined as "a crooked sword" and was part of the English language at the time that the Book of Mormon was translated.[116] In the 7th century, scimitars generally first appeared among the Turko- Mongol nomads of Central Asia however a notable exception was the sickle sword of ancient Egypt known as the khopesh[117] which was used from 3000 BC and is found on the Rosetta Stone dated to 196 BC. Eannatum, the king of Lagash, is shown on a Sumerian stele from 2500 BC equipped with a sickle sword.[118]
Apologists Michael R. Ash and William Hamblin postulate that the word was chosen by Joseph Smith as the closest workable English word for a short curved weapon used by the Nephites.[119] Mormon scholar Matthew Roper has noted there are a variety of weapons with curved blades found in Mesoamerica.[120]
System of exchange based on measures of grain using precious metals as a standard
The Book of Mormon details a system of measures used by the societies described therein.[121] No form of fiat currency, such as measures of gold for grain as described in the Book of Mormon, is known to have existed in any pre-Columbian culture. The vast majority of ancient Native American economies were gift economies, which do not use any form of currency and instead rely on reciprocal exchanges governed by social goodwill. Limited use of commodity currencies existed in large empires, such as in Mesoamerica where cacao beans were sometimes used.[122]
Knowledge of Hebrew and Egyptian languages
The Book of Mormon describes more than one literate people inhabiting ancient America. The Nephite people are described as possessing a language and writing with roots in Hebrew and Egyptian, and writing part of the original text of the Book of Mormon in this unknown language, called reformed Egyptian. A transcript of some of the characters of this language has been preserved in what had previously been erroneously identified as the "Anthon Transcript" but is now known as the "Caractors document".
Fifteen examples of distinct scripts have been identified in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, many from a single inscription.[123] While Maya contains cartouches and is a form of hieroglyphic script like Egyptian, no further resemblance to Hebrew or Egyptian hieroglyphs has been identified. Additionally, professional linguists and Egyptologists do not consider the Caractors document to contain any legitimate ancient writing. Edward H. Ashment called the characters of the transcript "hieroglyphics of the Micmac Indians of northeastern North America".[124]
The Smithsonian Institution has noted, "Reports of findings of ancient Egyptian Hebrew, and other Old World writings in the New World in pre-Columbian contexts have frequently appeared in newspapers, magazines, and sensational books. None of these claims has stood up to examination by reputable scholars. No inscriptions using Old World forms of writing have been shown to have occurred in any part of the Americas before 1492 except for a few Norse rune stones which have been found in Greenland."[125]
Linguistic studies on the evolution of the spoken languages of the Americas agree with the widely held model that Homo sapiens arrived in America between 15,000 and 10,000 BC. According to the Book of Mormon, additional immigrants arrived on the American continent about 2500 BC and about 600 BC.
Systems of measuring time (calendars)
Chronologic dates given in the Nephite portion of the Book of Mormon are stated in terms of the Nephite calendar. The Jaredite abridgment does not contain an apparent calendar, the length of reigns and ages of kings are indicated in years, but no connection beyond that to a continuous calendar is indicated. The system of dates used by the Lamanites is not stated, though the Book of Mormon indicates that Lamanites had a different system of counting hours.[126] The highest numbered month mentioned in the Book of Mormon is the eleventh, and the highest numbered day is the twelfth, but the total number of months in a year and the number of days in a month is not explicitly stated.[127] Even so, it appears that Book of Mormon peoples observed lunar cycles, "months",[128] and that the Nephites observed the Israelite Sabbath at the end of a seven-day week.[129]
Most North American tribes relied upon a calendar of 13 months, relating to the annual number of lunar cycles. Seasonal rounds and ceremonies were performed each moon. Months were counted in the days between phase cycles of the moon. Calendar systems in use in North America during this historical period relied on this simple system.[130]
One of the more distinctive features shared among pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations is the use of an extensive system of inter-related calendars. The epigraphic and archaeological record for this practice dates back at least 2,500 years, by which time it appears to have been well-established.[131] The most widespread and significant of these calendars was the 260-day calendar, formed by combining 20 named days with 13 numerals in successive sequence (13 × 20 = 260).[132] Another system of perhaps equal antiquity is the 365-day calendar, approximating the solar year, formed from 18 "months" × 20 named days + 5 additional days. These systems and others are found in societies of that era such as the Olmec, Zapotec, Mixe-Zoque, Mixtec, and Maya (whose system of Maya calendars are widely regarded as the most intricate and complex among them) reflected the vigesimal (base 20) numeral system and other numbers, such as 7, 9, 13, and 19.[133]
Latter-day Saints and Book of Mormon archaeology
Early activities
In the early 1840s, John Lloyd Stephens' two-volume work Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan was seen by some church members as an essential guide to the ruins of Book of Mormon cities. In the fall of 1842, an article appearing in the church's Times and Seasons alleged that the ruins of Quiriguá, discovered by Stephens, may be the very ruins of Zarahemla or some other Book of Mormon city.[134] Other articles followed, including one published shortly after the death of Joseph Smith. Every Latter Day Saint was encouraged to read Stephens' book and to regard the stone ruins described in it as relating to the Book of Mormon.[135] It is now believed that these Central American ruins date more recent than Book of Mormon times.[136]
In recent years, there have been differing views among Book of Mormon scholars, particularly between the scholars and the "hobbyists".[137]
New World Archaeological Foundation
From the mid-1950s onwards, New World Archaeological Foundation (NWAF), based out of Brigham Young University, has sponsored archaeological excavations in Mesoamerica, with a focus on the Mesoamerican time period known as the Preclassic (earlier than c. AD 200).[138] The results of these and other investigations, while producing valuable archaeological data, have not led to any widespread acceptance by non-Mormon archaeologists of the Book of Mormon account. In 1973, citing the lack of specific New World geographic locations to search, Michael D. Coe, a prominent Mesoamerican archaeologist and Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Yale University, wrote,
As far as I know there is not one professionally trained archaeologist, who is not a Mormon, who sees any scientific justification for believing the historicity of the Book of Mormon, and I would like to state that there are quite a few Mormon archaeologists who join this group.[139]
In 1955, Thomas Stuart Ferguson, an attorney and the founder of the NWAF, received five years of funding from the LDS Church and the NWAF then began to dig throughout Mesoamerica for evidence of the veracity of the Book of Mormon claims. In a 1961 newsletter, Ferguson predicted that although nothing had been found, the Book of Mormon cities would be found within 10 years. The NWAF became part of BYU in 1961 and Ferguson was removed from the director position.
Eleven years after Ferguson was no longer affiliated with the NWAF, in 1972 Christian scholar Hal Hougey wrote Ferguson questioning the progress given the stated timetable in which the cities would be found.[140] Replying to Hougey, as well as other secular and non-secular requests, Ferguson wrote in a letter dated 5 June 1972: "Ten years have passed .... I had sincerely hoped that Book-of-Mormon cities would be positively identified within 10 years—and time has proved me wrong in my anticipation."[140]
In 1976, fifteen years removed from any archaeological involvement with the NWAF, referring to his own paper, Ferguson wrote a letter in which he stated:
The real implication of the paper is that you can't set the Book-of-Mormon geography down anywhere—because it is fictional and will never meet the requirements of the dirt-archaeology. I should say—what is in the ground will never conform to what is in the book.[141]
Though the NWAF failed to establish a common belief of a specific Book of Mormon geographic location, the archaeological investigations of NWAF-sponsored projects were a success for ancient American archaeology in general which has been recognized and appreciated by non-Mormon archaeologists.[139] Currently BYU maintains 86 documents on the work of the NWAF at the BYU NWAF website; these documents are used outside both BYU and the LDS Church by researchers.
Modern approach and conclusions
There is a broad consensus among archaeologists that the archaeological record does not substantiate the Book of Mormon account, and in most ways directly contradicts it.[142][143]
An example of the mainstream archaeological opinion of Mormon archaeology is summarized by historian and journalist Hampton Sides:
Yale's Michael Coe likes to talk about what he calls "the fallacy of misplaced concreteness," the tendency among Mormon theorists like Sorenson to keep the discussion trained on all sorts of extraneous subtopics ... while avoiding what is most obvious: that Joseph Smith probably meant "horse" when he wrote down the word "horse".[144]
Proposed geographical settings
Various apologists have claimed that events in the Book of Mormon took place in a variety of locations[145] most notably North America, South America,[146] and Central America. These finds are divided into competing models, most notably the Hemispheric Geography Model, the Mesoamerican Limited Geography Model, and the Finger Lakes Limited Geography Model.
Generally non-Mormon archaeologists do not consider there to be any authentic Book of Mormon archaeological sites.
Hemispheric Geography Model
The Hemispheric Geography Model posits that the events of the Book of Mormon took place over the entirety of the North and South American continents. By corollary some Mormons believe that the three groups mentioned in the Book of Mormon (Jaredites, Nephites, and Lamanites) exclusively populated an empty North and South American Continent, and that Native Americans were all of Israeli descent.
Speculations from various church leaders has shifted slightly over time, with early Mormon leaders including Orson Pratt taking a traditional stance.[147][148][149][150] This model was also implicitly endorsed in the introduction to the Book of Mormon which, before 2008, stated that Lamanites are the "principal ancestors of the American Indians."[151] More recently, the church has not taken as strong position on the absolute origin of Native American peoples.[152]
Some Mormon apologists note that on June 4, 1834, during the Zion's Camp trek through Illinois, Joseph Smith stated that the group was "wandering over the plains of the Nephites, recounting occasionally the history of the Book of Mormon, roving over the mounds of that once beloved people of the Lord, picking up their skulls & their bones, as proof of its divine authenticity".[153]
Criticism
Critics have noted that the assumption that Lamanites are the ancestors of the American Indians is wholly unfounded in current archaeological and genetic research.[154]
Limited geography models
Mesoamerican Limited Geography Model
The Mesoamerican Limited Geography Model posits that the events of the Book of Mormon occurred in a geographically "limited" region in Mesoamerica only hundreds of miles in dimension and that other people were present in the New World at the time of Lehi's arrival. This model has been proposed and advocated by various Mormon apologists in the 20th century (both RLDS and LDS).[155][156][157] Geographically limited settings for the Book of Mormon have been suggested by LDS church leaders as well,[158][159] and this view has been published in the official church magazine, Ensign.[160]
Mormon apologists believe the following archaeological evidence supports the Mesoamerican Geography Model:
- Some Mormon apologists argue that there is only a single plausible match with the geography in Mesoamerica centered around the Isthmus of Tehuantepec (current day Guatemala, the southern Mexico States of Tabasco, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Veracruz, and the surrounding area).[161]
- Mormon apologist John L. Sorenson cites discoveries of fortifications at Becán, Tlaxcala, Puebla, Teotihuacan, and Kaminaljuyu, dated between 100 and 300 AD, as evidence of the Book of Mormon's account of large-scale warfare.[162]
- Some apologists, and church leaders (including Joseph Smith) believe that the Maya ruins on the Yucatán Peninsula belonged to Book of Mormon peoples[163] LDS efforts to relate anachronistic Mayan ruins to Book of Mormon cities, owes much of its origins to an infatuation with archaeologists Stephens' and Catherwood's discoveries of Mesoamerican ruins, made public more than a decade after the first publication of the Book of Mormon.[164] These findings were cited by early church leaders and publications as confirming evidence.[165] Critics note that according to Mormon 6:5, Nephite civilization came to an end near the year 384 AD. Copan, Quirigua, and sites in the Yucatàn visited by Stephens and Catherwood, contain artifacts that date more recent than Book of Mormon times. It has not been shown that any of Stephens' artifacts date to Book of Mormon times.
Criticism
- The Limited Mesoamerican Geography Model has been critiqued by a number of scholars, who suggest that it is not an adequate explanation for Book of Mormon geography and that the locations, events, flora and fauna described in it do not precisely match.[166][167] In response to one of these critiques in 1994, Sorenson reaffirmed his support for a limited Mesoamerican geographical setting.[168]
- Among apologists, there have been critiques—particularly around the location of the Hill Cumorah, which most Mormons consider to be definitively identified as a location in New York. In a Mesoamerican Limited Geography model, this would require there to be two Cumorahs (which some consider preposterous[169]).
Finger Lakes Limited Geography Model
Some Mormon apologists hold that the events of the Book of Mormon occurred in a small region in and around the Finger Lakes region of New York. Part of the basis of this theory lies on statements made by Joseph Smith and other church leaders.[170][171][172][173][174][175]
Mormon scholar Hugh Nibley, in apparent agreement with this view, drew attention to mound builder works of North America as "an excellent description of Book of Mormon strong places".[176]
Criticism
Mormon scholars have estimated that at various periods in Book of Mormon history, the populations of civilizations discussed in the book would have ranged between 300,000 and 1.5 million people.[177] The size of the late Jaredite civilization was even larger. According to the Book of Mormon, the final war that destroyed the Jaredites resulted in the deaths of at least two million people.[178] From Book of Mormon population estimates, it is evident that the civilizations described are comparable in size to the civilizations of ancient Egypt, ancient Greece, ancient Rome, and the Maya. Such civilizations left numerous artifacts in the form of hewn stone ruins, tombs, temples, pyramids, roads, arches, walls, frescos, statues, vases, and coins.
No evidence of any civilizations approaching this size and scale have been found in the Finger Lakes region of New York.
South American Limited Geography Model
A document in the handwriting of Frederick G. Williams, one of Joseph Smith's counselors and scribes, asserts that Lehi's people landed in South America at thirty degrees south latitude, which is Coquimbo Bay, Chile. Analysis of the history and provenance of this document does not indicate it came from Joseph Smith and looks to just be an opinion from an unknown source.[179]
Old World Book of Mormon archaeology
Some Mormon archaeologists and researchers have focused on the Arabian peninsula in the Middle East where they believe the Book of Mormon narrative describes actual locations. These alleged connections include the following:
- One Mormon apologist believes that an ancient tribe known to have existed on the Arabian Peninsula with a similar name to that of the Book of Mormon figure Lehi may have adopted his name.[180] Other Mormon scholars have not reached this conclusion, as "far too little is yet known about early Arabia to strengthen a link with the historical Lehi, and other explanations are readily available for every point advanced."[181]
- The Wadi Tayyib al-Ism is considered to be a plausible location for the Book of Mormon River of Laman by some Mormon researchers.[182] This is disputed by other Mormon researchers.[183]
- Some Mormon theorist believe that the Book of Mormon place name "Nahom" correlates to a location in Yemen referred to as "NHM".[184] According to Jerald and Sandra Tanner this link is disputed by mainstream archaeologists.[185]
- Mormon scholars believe they have located several plausible sites for the Book of Mormon location "Bountiful".[186]
- One Mormon apologist believes that an ancient Judean artifact is connected with the Book of Mormon figure Mulek.[187]
- Several Mormon apologists have proposed a variety of locations on the Arabian Peninsula that they believe could be the Book of Mormon location "Shazer".[188]
Mormon cultural belief regarding Book of Mormon archaeology
Existing ancient records of the New World
The Smithsonian Institution has noted, "Reports of findings of ancient Egyptian Hebrew, and other Old World writings in the New World in pre-Columbian contexts have frequently appeared in newspapers, magazines, and sensational books. None of these claims has stood up to examination by reputable scholars. No inscriptions using Old World forms of writing have been shown to have occurred in any part of the Americas before 1492 except for a few Norse rune stones which have been found in Greenland."[125]
Losses of ancient writings occurred in the Old World, including as a result of deliberate or accidental fires, wars, earthquakes, and floods. Similar losses occurred in the New World. Much of the literature of the pre-Columbian Maya was destroyed during the Spanish conquest in the 16th century.[189] On this point, Michael Coe noted:
Nonetheless, our knowledge of ancient Maya thought must represent only a tiny fraction of the whole picture, for of the thousands of books in which the full extent of their learning and ritual was recorded, only four have survived to modern times (as though all that posterity knew of ourselves were to be based upon three prayer books and Pilgrim's Progress).[190]
The Maya civilization also left behind a vast corpus of inscriptions (upwards of ten thousand are known) written in the Maya script, the earliest of which date from around the 3rd century BC with the majority written in the Classic Period (c. 250–900 AD).[191] Mayanist scholarship is now able to decipher a large number of these inscriptions. These inscriptions are mainly concerned with the activities of Mayan rulers and the commemoration of significant events, with the oldest known Long Count date corresponding to December 7, 36 BC, being recorded on Chiapa de Corzo Stela 2 in central Chiapas.[192] None of these inscriptions have been correlated with events, places, or rulers of Book of Mormon.[193]
One Mormon researcher has referred to ancient Mesoamerican accounts that appear to parallel events recorded in the Book of Mormon.[194]
Jaredites and the Olmec
There is no archaeological evidence of the Jaredite people described in the Book of Mormon that is accepted by mainstream archaeologists. Nevertheless, some Mormon scholars believe that the Jaredites were the Olmec civilization,[195][196] though archaeological evidence supporting this theory is disputed and circumstantial.
The Jaredites of the Book of Mormon are identified as being primarily located in the land northward as opposed to the land southward,[197] however, no information is discussed specific to the Jaredites as to where the dividing line of the land northward and land southward was.
The date at which the Jaredites would be considered a civilization is not identified in the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon claims the Jaredite civilization on the American continent was completely destroyed as the result of a civil war some time after (as late as 400 BC).[198] Lehi's party is claimed to have arrived in the New World (c. 590 BC). Olmec civilization flourished in Mesoamerica during the Preclassic period, dating from 1200 BC to about 400 BC.
Nephites
No Central or South American civilization is recognized by non-LDS scholars to correlate with the Nephites of the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon makes no mention of Lamanites or Nephites erecting impressive works of hewn stone as did the Maya or various South American peoples.[199] Some believe that Nephites lived in the Great Lakes region.[200] Numerous aboriginal fortresses of earth and timber were known to have existed in this region.[201]
Military fortifications
There are several instances in the Book of Mormon in which cities are described as having defensive fortifications.[202] One archaeologist has noted the existence of ancient Mesoamerican defensive fortifications.[203] According to one article in an LDS Church magazine, military fortifying berms are found in the Yucatán Peninsula.[204][205] Proponents of a Great Lakes limited geography model, which rejects the presence of Book of Mormon peoples in Mesoamerica, affirm that such works are known to have existed in New York.[201][206]
Efforts to correlate artifacts
Izapa Stela 5
In the early 1950s, M. Wells Jakeman of the BYU Department of Archaeology suggested that a complicated scene carved on Stela 5 in Izapa was a depiction of a Book of Mormon event called "Lehi's dream", which features a vision of the tree of life.[207] This interpretation is disputed by other Mormon and non-Mormon scholars.[208] Julia Guernsey Kappelman, author of a definitive work on Izapan culture, finds that Jakeman's research "belies an obvious religious agenda that ignored Izapa Stela 5's heritage".[209]
Other artifacts
Sorenson claims that one artifact, La Venta Stela 3, depicts a person with Semitic features ("striking beard and beaked nose").[210] Mormon researchers such as Robin Heyworth have claimed that Copan Stela B depicts elephants;[211][212] others such as Alfred M Tozzer and Glover M Allen claim it depicts macaws.[213][214]
See also
Notes
- ↑ Abanes 2003, pp. 74–77
- ↑ Wolverton 2004, pp. 84–85
- ↑ Persuitte 2000, p. 102
- ↑ "Does Archaeology Support The Book Of Mormon?". Mormons in Transition web site. Institute for Religious Research. Retrieved February 10, 2010.
- ↑ Priddis 1975; see RLDS D&C 110:20 Archived 2018-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, were advanced by RLDS members: Hills 1917; Hills 1918; Hills 1924, and Gunsolley 1922
- ↑ Saints, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day. "Book of Mormon and DNA Studies". ChurchofJesusChrist.org. Retrieved 2019-03-30.
- ↑ Silverberg 1969.
- ↑ Kennedy 1994.
- ↑ Garlinghouse, Thomas, "Revisiting the Mound Builder Controversy", History Today, September 2001, Vol. 51, Issue 9, p. 38.
- ↑ Robert Silverberg, Mound Builders of Ancient America: The Archaeology of a Myth (New York: New York Graphic Society, 1968); Silverberg 1969.
- ↑ Curtis Dahl, "Mound-Builders, Mormons, and William Cullen Bryant", The New England Quarterly, vol. 34, no. 2, June 1961, pp. 178–90 ("Undoubtedly the most famous and certainly the most influential of all Mound-Builder literature is the Book of Mormon (1830)). Whether one wishes to accept it as divinely inspired or the work of Joseph Smith, it fits exactly into the tradition. Despite its pseudo-Biblical style and its general inchoateness, it is certainly the most imaginative and best sustained of the stories about the Mound-Builders" (at p. 187).
- ↑ Fawn M. Brodie, No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith (rev. ed., New York: Knopf, 1971) p. 36.
- ↑ See Squier 1849
- ↑ See mound builder homes of "clay-plastered poles": Stuart, George E., Who Were the "Mound Builders"?, National Geographic, Vol. 142, No. 6, December 1972, pg. 789
- ↑ See Searching for the Great Hopewell Road, based on the investigations of archaeologist Dr. Bradley Lepper, Ohio Historical Society, Pangea Production Ltd, 1998
- ↑ See Priest, Josiah, American Antiquities and Discoveries in the West, pg. 179;
- ↑ See Mound Builders & Cliff Dwellers, Lost Civilizations series, Dale M. Brown (editor), pg. 26
- ↑ Priest, Josiah, American Antiquities and Discoveries in the West, 176; Mound Builders & Cliff Dwellers, Lost Civilizations series, Dale M. Brown (editor), pg. 26
- ↑ See Ritchie, William A. The Archaeology of New York State, pp. 259, 261
- ↑ See freshwater pearl necklaces, and pearls sewn on clothing: Mound Builders & Cliff Dwellers, Lost Civilizations series, Dale M. Brown (editor), pg. 26
- ↑ "New Light: Smithsonian Statement on the Book of Mormon Revised", Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, Provo, Utah: Maxwell Institute, 7 (1): 77, 1998, retrieved 2014-12-15
- ↑ Givens 2002, p. 132
- ↑ "National Geographic Society Statement on the Book of Mormon". August 12, 1998. Letter from Julie Crain addressed to Luke Wilson of the Institute for Religious Research.
- ↑ "Book of Mormon search on National Geographic website". nationalgeographic.com.
- ↑ 1 Nephi 18:25, Enos 1:21, Alma 18:9,10,12, Alma 20:6, 3 Nephi 3:22, 3 Nephi 4:4, and Ether 9:19.
- ↑ Vila, C.; et al. (2001). "Widespread Origins of Domestic Horse Lineages" (PDF). Science. 291 (5503): 474–477. Bibcode:2001Sci...291..474V. doi:10.1126/science.291.5503.474. PMID 11161199. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-01-28. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
- ↑ Luís, Cristina; et al. (2006). "Iberian Origins of New World Horse Breeds". Quaternary Science Reviews. 97 (2): 107–113. doi:10.1093/jhered/esj020. PMID 16489143.
- ↑ Haile, James; et al. (2009). "Ancient DNA reveals late survival of mammoth and horse in interior Alaska". PNAS. 106 (52): 22352–22357. Bibcode:2009PNAS..10622352H. doi:10.1073/pnas.0912510106. PMC 2795395. PMID 20018740.
- ↑ Singer, Ben. "A brief history of the horse in America; Horse phylogeny and evolution". Canadian Geographic Magazine. Archived from the original on October 29, 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ↑ See references cited in John L. Sorenson, An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Company, 1996), 295, n.63.
- ↑ Peterson Daniel C. and Roper, Matthew "Ein Heldenleben? On Thomas Stuart Ferguson as an Elias for Cultural Mormons" FARMS Review: Volume - 16, Issue - 1 Archived 2008-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Bennett, Robert R. "Horses in the Book of Mormon". FARMS. Archived from the original on November 11, 2013.
- ↑ Diamond 1999
- ↑ Sharon Levy, "Mammoth Mystery, Did Climate Changes Wipe Out North America's Giant Mammals, Or Did Our Stone Age Ancestors Hunt Them To Extinction?" Onearth, Winter 2006, pp15-19
- ↑ Wang, Yuchang; Pedersen, M.W.; Alsos, I.G.; et a (October 20, 2021). "Late Quaternary dynamics of Arctic biota from ancient environmental genomics". Nature. 600 (7887): 86–92. Bibcode:2021Natur.600...86W. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-04016-x. PMC 8636272. PMID 34671161. S2CID 239051880.
- ↑ Kristine J. Crossen, "5,700-Year-Old Mammoth Remains from the Pribilof Islands, Alaska: Last Outpost of North America Megafauna", Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Volume 37, Number 7, (Geological Society of America, 2005), 463
- ↑ In his 1903 The Mound Builders, Their Works and Relics, minister Stephen Dennison Peet cites instances of exhumed mastodon remains and arguments given for why the remains were believed to be contemporary with mound builders. Stephen Dennison Peet, The Mound Builders, pp. 38–44. Elephant effigy pipes, of the characteristic mound builder platform style, were reported as archaeological finds in Iowa, Stephen Dennison Peet, The Mound Builders, pp. 11–14. see also M.C. Read's 1896, Archaeology of Ohio, pp 116–17 and a mound in Wisconsin has been called the "elephant mound," though archaeologists question whether this is in fact the animal represented. On Elephant platform pipes and the Elephant Mound of Grand County, Wisconsin, see Charles E. Putnam (President of the Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences), Elephant Pipes and Inscribed Tablets in the Museum of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Davenport, Iowa, 1885, pp. 19–20, and U.S. Ethnology Bureau, Vol. 2., 1880–81,Pg. 153; see also Charles Valentine Riley, The American Naturalist, American Society of Naturalists (Essex Institute), pp. 275–77. The former Iowa state archaeologist Marshall McKusick discusses the evidence indicating that the elephant platform pipes are frauds in his book on the so-called Davenport Tablets. McKusick, Marshall, The Davenport Conspiracy Revisited. Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1991. ISBN 978-0-8138-0344-9
- ↑ Enos 1:21, 1 Nephi 18:25, Ether 9:18
- ↑ Ether 9:18
- ↑ Martínez, AM; Gama, LT; Cañón, J; et al. (2012). "Genetic footprints of Iberian cattle in America 500 years after the arrival of Columbus". PLOS ONE. 7 (11): e49066. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...749066M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0049066. PMC 3498335. PMID 23155451.
- ↑ Diamond 1999, pp. 165, 167–68
- ↑ See, for example, "Plants and Animals in the Book of Mormon: Possible Solutions to Apparent Problems". Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ↑ Mosiah 14:5-7, Mosiah 15:6, Mosiah 26:20-21, Alma 5:37-39, 59-60, Alma 25:12, Helaman 15:13, 3 Nephi 14:15, 3 Nephi 15:17, 21, 24, 3 Nephi 16:1, 3, 3 Nephi 18:31, 3 Nephi 20:16, 3 Nephi 21:12
- ↑ 1 Nephi 18:25
- ↑ Ether 9:18
- ↑ 3 Nephi 4:7
- 1 2 Michael Francis, John, ed. (2006). "Columbian Exchange—Livestock". Iberia and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History: a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 303–308. ISBN 978-1-85109-421-9.
- ↑ Sorenson, John L. An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon. Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1996. 296.
- ↑ Linne, Sigvald Mexican Highland Cultures: Archaeological Researches at Teotihuacan, Calpoulalpan and Chalchicomula in 1934-35. University Alabama Press, 2006. 116.
- ↑ "Plants and Animals in the Book of Mormon: Possible Solutions to Apparent Problems". Retrieved 2009-06-01.
- ↑ "Where Do Alpacas Live?". WorldAtlas. 9 August 2018. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
- ↑ Ether 6:4
- ↑ Roper, Matthew; Miller, Wade E. (2017). "Animals in the Book of Mormon: Challenges and Perspectives". BYU Studies. 56 (4): 133–175. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ Ensminger, M. Eugene (1986). Sheep & goat science. Rick Parker, M. Eugene Ensminger (5th ed.). Danville, Ill.: Interstate Printers & Publishers. ISBN 0-8134-2464-X. OCLC 13276444.
- ↑ 1 Ne. 18: 25, Enos 1: 21, Ether 9: 18.
- ↑ Matthew Roper (2006). "Deer as "Goat" and Pre-Columbian Domesticate". Insights. 26 (6). Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ 3 Nephi 14:6
- 1 2 Ether 9:17–18
- ↑ John J. Mayer and I Lehr Brisbin, Jr. Wild Pigs in the United States: Their History, Comparative Morphology, and Current Status (1991, University of Georgia Press).
- ↑ Gongora, J., and C. Moran. 2005. "Nuclear and mitochondrial evolutionary analyses of Collared, White-lipped, and Chacoan peccaries (Tayassuidae)." Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution; 34: 181–89.
- ↑ S.v. "peccary", The New Columbia Encyclopedia.
- ↑ Phyllis Carol Olive, Lost Lands of the Book of Mormon, 83
- ↑ Donkin, R.A. (1985). "The Peccary -- With Observations on the Introduction of Pigs to the New World". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 75 (5): 3. doi:10.2307/1006340. JSTOR 1006340.
- ↑ Donkin, R.A. (1985). "The Peccary -- With Observations on the Introduction of Pigs to the New World". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 75 (5): 30,35–39. doi:10.2307/1006340. JSTOR 1006340.
- ↑ Donkin, R.A. (1985). "The Peccary -- With Observations on the Introduction of Pigs to the New World". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 75 (5): 29. doi:10.2307/1006340. JSTOR 1006340.
- ↑ Venderwarker, Amber M. (2006). Farming, Hunting, and Fishing in the Olmec World. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. pp. 125–127, 131. ISBN 978-0-292-72624-6.
- ↑ See Alma 11: 7, 15; Mosiah 7: 22; Mosiah 9: 9.
- ↑ John A. Price, "The Book of Mormon vs Anthropological Prehistory," The Indian Historian 7 (Summer, 1974): 35-40. Quotes:
- "The aboriginal New World did not have wheat, barley, cows, oxen..."
- "No Native Americans made grape wine or wheat bread..."
- "The Jaredites and Nephites are portrayed as having plow agriculture and wheat and barley" [...] "but nothing remotely resembling this kind of culture has ever been found, either archaeologically or ethnographically, in the aboriginal New World."
- ↑ 1 Nephi 18:6, 24
- ↑ "The Exchange of Plant and Animal Species Between the New World and Old World | Encyclopedia.com". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
- ↑ Robert R. Bennett (2000). "Barley and Wheat in the Book Mormon". Featured Papers. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ Bennett cites, Nancy B. Asch and David L. Asch, "Archeobotany," in Deer Track: A Late Woodland Village in the Mississippi Valley, ed. Charles R. McGimsey and Michael D. Conner (Kampsville, Ill. Center for American Archaeology, 1985), 44, pg. 78
- ↑ "Little Barley - The Office of the State Archaeologist". archaeology.uiowa.edu.
- ↑ Fossum, Andrew (1918). Fossum, Andrew. The Norse Discovery of America. Augsburg publishing house. p. 152. Retrieved 2009-06-01.
norse self-sown wheat.
; See also "Leif Ericsson", The New Columbia Encyclopedia. - ↑ Barley and Wheat in the Book Mormon, Robert R. Bennett Provo, Utah: Maxwell Institute. Archived 2008-09-18 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Bennett cites, Nancy B. Asch and David L. Asch, "Archeobotany," in Deer Track: A Late Woodland Village in the Mississippi Valley, ed. Charles R. McGimsey and Michael D. Conner (Kampsville, Illinois, Center for American Archaeology, 1985), 44, p. 78
- ↑ Robert R. Bennett, "Barley and Wheat in the Book Mormon", Provo, Utah: Maxwell Institute. Archived 2008-09-18 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Little Barley". Archived from the original on 2013-12-30.
- ↑ "Fullscreen | Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship". Publications.maxwellinstitute.byu.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-05-12. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
- ↑ Alma 1:29, Alma 4:6, Ether 9:17, Ether 10:24.
- ↑ Sorenson, John L. (2013). Mormon's Codex. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book. pp. 346–347.
- ↑ Sorenson, John L (March 1995). "A New Evaluation of the Smithsonian Institution "Statement regarding the Book of Mormon"". Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship. Archived from the original on 2018-09-03. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
- ↑ Hogue, Charles Leonard (1993). Latin American insects and entomology. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 328. ISBN 978-0-520-07849-9. OCLC 25164105.
- ↑ Brown, Thomas (1832). The Book of Butterflies, Sphinxes, and Moths: Illustrated by Ninety-six Engravings Coloured After Nature. Whittaker, Treacher. pp. 65–66.
- ↑ de Avila, Alejandro (1997). Klein, Kathryn (ed.). The Unbroken Thread: Conserving the Textile Traditions of Oaxaca (PDF). Los Angeles: The Getty Conservation Institute. p. 125.
Borah (1943:102—14) proposed that indigenous weavers began to use wild silk only after sericulture, brought from Europe, began to wane. However, a document dating from 1777 describes the excavation of a Pre-columbian burial in which textiles of wild silk, cotton, and feathers were found
- ↑ Alma 18:9-10,12, Alma 20:6, 3 Nephi 3:22
- ↑ Wissler, Clark. The American Indian, pp. 32–39, as quoted in Roberts 1992, pp. 99
- ↑ See Pre-Columbian Contact with the Americas across the Oceans: An Annotated Bibliography Archived 2008-03-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Miller, Robert Ryal, Mexico: A History, University of Oklahoma Press, 1985
- ↑ Phillips, Charles; Jones, David M (2005). Aztec & Maya: Life in an Ancient Civilization. London: Hermes House. p. 65.
- ↑ Charnay, Désiré (1888). The Ancient Cities of the New World, being Voyages and Explorations in Mexico and Central America from 1857–1882. New York, New York: Harper and Brothers. p. 171. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ Holmes, William Henry (1919). Handbook of Aboriginal American Antiquities - Bulletin 60, Part 1. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. p. 20. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ Sorenson, p. 59
- ↑ Gardner, Brant (2015). Traditions of the Fathers: The Book of Mormon As History. Sandy, Utah: Greg Kofford Books. pp. 295–297. ISBN 978-1-58958-665-9.
- ↑ Ash, Michael R. (2008), Shaken Faith Syndrome: Strengthening One's Testimony in the Face of Criticism and Doubt, Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research, p. 141, ISBN 978-1-893036-08-6
- ↑ See 1 Nephi 16:18, 2 Nephi 5:15, Jarom 1:8, Ether 7:9
- ↑ David Malakoff (March 2021). "Ancient Native Americans among the world's first coppersmiths". Science. doi:10.1126/science.abi6135.
- ↑ Don Spohn (April 2017). Ancient Copper Mining. The 2016 Copper Country Ancient Sites Conservancy Conference.
- ↑ M. Bebber, A.J.M Key, M. Fisch, R. Meindl, M Eren (April 2019). "The exceptional abandonment of metal tools by North American hunter-gatherers, 3000 B.P." Scientific Reports. 9 (5756). doi:10.1038/s41598-019-42185-y. PMC 6453894.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Michelle Bebber (4 January 2021). "The Role of Functional Efficiency in the Decline of North America's Copper Culture (8000–3000 BP): an Experimental, Ecological, and Evolutionary Approach". Journal of Archeological Method and Theory. 28: 1224–1260.
- ↑ Ehrhardt, Kathleen L. (September 2009). "Copper Working Technologies, Contexts of Use, and Social Complexity in the Eastern Woodlands of Native North America". Journal of World Prehistory. 22 (3): 213–235. doi:10.1007/s10963-009-9020-8. S2CID 145523244.
- ↑ Mound Builders & Cliff Dwellers, Lost Civilizations series, edited by Dale M. Brown, 1992, p. 26
- ↑ Levine, Mary Ann (April 2007). "Determining the Provenance of native copper artifacts from Northeastern North America: evidence from instrumental neutron activation analysis". Journal of Archaeological Science. 34 (4): 572–87. Bibcode:2007JArSc..34..572L. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2006.06.015.
- ↑ Pierre Agrinier (2000). "Mound 27 and the Middle Preclassic Period at Mirador, Chiapas, Mexico". Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation. Provo, Utah: New World Archaeological Foundation. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ "Archaeologist 'Strikes Gold' With Finds Of Ancient Nasca Iron Ore Mine In Peru". Sciencedaily.com. 2008-02-03. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
- ↑ "Steel in the Book of Mormon".
- ↑ 1 Nephi 4:9; 1 Nephi 16:18
- ↑ "2 Samuel 22:35". churchofjesuschrist.org. 2012-02-21. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
- ↑ http://www.fairlds.org/Book_of_Mormon/Steel_in_the_Book_of_Mormon.html article by William Hamblin on steel in the Book of Mormon
- ↑ 2 Nephi 5:14
- ↑ Mosiah 8:11
- ↑ Matthew Roper (1997). "On Cynics and Swords". FARMS review of books on the Book of Mormon. 9 (1).
- ↑ Roper, Matthew (1999). "Swords and "Cimeters" in the Book of Mormon". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 8 (1): 34–43. doi:10.2307/44758887. JSTOR 44758887. S2CID 254309120. Retrieved 2014-12-15."Spaniards who faced native Mesoamerican swords in battle were deeply impressed by their deadly cutting power and razorlike sharpness."
- ↑ Enos 1:20, Mosiah 9:16, Mosiah 10:8, Alma 2:12, Alma 27:29, Alma 43:18, 20, 37, Alma 44:8, Alma 60:2, Helaman 1:14
- ↑ B. H. Roberts noted: "The word [cimiter] is of oriental and uncertain origin and appears in various forms. How it came to be introduced into the speech and writings of the Nephites, and how not used in the other Hebrew literature at an earlier date, is so far as I know, unaccountable. The earliest use of the word I have found is in Gibbon, where referring to the alleged incident of finding the sword of Mars for Attila, he there calls that sword of Mars 'cimiter'; but that was about 450 A.D." - Roberts 1992, pp. 112
- ↑ Blount, Thomas (1661). Glossographia, or, A dictionary interpreting all such hard words of whatsoever language now used in our refined English tongue with etymologies, definitions and historical observations on the same: also the terms of divinity, law, physick, mathematicks and other arts and sciences explicated. London, England: Tho. Newcombe. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ Kamenir, Victor (24 March 2018). "Scimitar: How One Sword Dominated Warfare for Centuries". nationalinterest.org. The National Interest, Warfare History Network. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ Yadin, Yigael (1963). The Art of Warfare in Biblical Lands: In the Light of Archaeological Study Volume 1. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 134.
- ↑ Ash states: "there is enough Mesoamerican artwork and artifacts that display the basic characteristics of a scimitar that the Book of Mormon is vindicated for its usage." See: http://www.fairlds.org/FAIR_Brochures/Anachronisms3.pdf
- ↑ Roper, Matthew (1999). "Swords and Cimeters in the Book of Mormon". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 8 (1): 34–43, 77–78. doi:10.2307/44758887. JSTOR 44758887. S2CID 254309120. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
- ↑ "Alma 11". churchofjesuschrist.org. 2012-02-21. Retrieved 2012-06-11.
- ↑ Coe 2002, p. 132 "[W]ell into Colonial times the beans served as a form of money in regional markets."
- ↑ Macri, Martha J. (1996). "Maya and Other Mesoamerican Scripts," in The World's Writing Systems. England: Oxford. pp. 172–182.
- ↑ Edward H. Ashment (May–June 1980). "The Book of Mormon and the Anthon Transcript: An Interim Report". Sunstone (21): 30. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- 1 2 Statement Regarding the Book of Mormon, Department of Anthropology, Smithsonian Institution, 1996, retrieved 2014-12-15 (hosted on the Institute for Religious Research website)
- ↑ Alma 18:14
- ↑ Sorenson, John L (1991). Thorne, Melvin J. (ed.). Seasons of War, Seasons of Peace. Deseret Book Company and FARMS. p. 250. ISBN 978-0-87579-387-0.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - ↑ Omni 1:21
- ↑ Jarom 1:5, Mosiah 13:16–19
- ↑ 13 Moons On the Turtles Back. A Native American Year of Moons, ISBN 0-698-11584-8, Putnam and Grossnet Group, 199
- ↑ Marcus, Joyce (1991). "First Dates: The Maya calendar and writing system were not the only ones in Mesoamerica—or even the earliest". Natural History. April: 22–25. Archived from the original on September 9, 2005.
- ↑ Coe 2002, p. 59
- ↑ Rice, Prudence M. (2007). Maya Calendar Origins: Monuments, Mythistory, and the Materialization of Time (First ed.). Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-292-71688-9.
- ↑ "Zarahemla", Times and Seasons, October 1, 1842, Volume 3, Number 23, p. 927.
- ↑ "Stephens' Works on Central America", Times and Seasons, October 1, 1843, Volume 4, Number 22, p. 346; See also Times and Seasons, April 1, 1845, Volume 6, Number 6, pg 855
- ↑ Scholars date the ruins of Quirigua to about the 8th century AD. See Quirigua
- ↑ Givens 2002, p. 146
- ↑ New World Archaeological Foundation, online collections at BYU.
- 1 2 Coe 1973, pp. 41–46
- 1 2 Larson 1990, pp. 76
- ↑ Larson 1990, pp. 79
- ↑ Outen, Marcia Van (11 July 2011). The Mormon Contradiction:: In Their Own Words. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4678-9349-7 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Dale Guthrie, R. (13 November 2003). "Rapid body size decline in Alaskan Pleistocene horses before extinction". Nature. 426 (6963): 169–171. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..169D. doi:10.1038/nature02098. PMID 14614503. S2CID 186242574.
- ↑ Sides, Hampton, "This is Not the Place!", Double Take Magazine, Vol. 5, No 2; Also included in his work American: Dispatches from the New Frontier, 2004
- ↑ One book compiled by prominent Mormon scholar John Sorenson has more than 400 pages of possible location theories placing Book of Mormon events everywhere from the Finger Lakes region of the Northeast United States to Chile. Sorenson, John L., compiler. The Geography of Book of Mormon Events: A Source Book Provo: FARMS, 1992. ASIN: B0006QHZWE.
- ↑ Priddis 1975, pp. 9, 16, 17
- ↑ This view was incorporated by Orson Pratt into his footnotes for the 1879 edition of the Book of Mormon. (These geographical footnotes were later removed in 1920 and all subsequent editions).
- ↑ Silverberg quotes early Mormon Apostle Orson Pratt who attempted to incorporate "ancient mounds filled with human bones" in a geographic model spanning "North and South America." (Silverberg, Robert, The Mound Builders, pg. 73)
- ↑ A note in the handwriting of Frederick G. Williams, one of Joseph Smith's counsellors and scribes, asserts that Lehi's people landed in South America at thirty degrees south latitude. U.A.S. Newsletter (Provo, Utah: University Archaeological Society at Brigham Young University) January 30, 1963, p. 7. An official statement by the LDS Church discourages Church members from making too much of the Williams document. Frederick J. Pack (Chairman of the Gospel Doctrine Committee of the Church) and George D. Pyper, The Instructor 73, No. 4, 1938, pg 160.
- ↑ Orson Pratt also speculated that the Nephite landing site was on the coast of Chile near Valparaiso, Orson Pratt, Journal of Discourses (London, England: Albert Carrington, 1869), vol. 12; p. 342; Volume 14, p. 325, 1872.
- ↑ Introduction to the Book of Mormon, prior to 2008. See for instance 1979 edition.
- ↑ A 1938 church study guide asserted that "all the Book of Mormon text requires" is a "Hebrew origin for at least a part of Indian ancestry". Berrett & Hunter 1938
- ↑ Jessee 1984, p. 324 (See also Zelph)
- ↑ Southerton 2004, p. 42 "For many Mormons, this is as deep as their awareness of the origin of Native Americans extends. They remain oblivious to the large volume of research that has revealed continuous, widespread human occupation of the Americas for the last 14,000 years. Such research conflicts with erroneous LDS interpretations and oral traditions and unfortunately has, until recently, been ignored."
- ↑ See Hills 1917, Smith 1997, Berrett & Hunter 1938, Sorenson 1985, Roper 2004, Nibley 1980
- ↑ Sjodahl, Janne M (1927). "An Introduction to the Study of the Book of Mormon". Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press.
- ↑ "Limited Geography and the Book of Mormon: Historical Antecedents and Early Interpretations", by Matthew Roper, section on the geographic ideas of John E. Page, BYU Maxwell Institute, 2004.
- ↑ Roper 2004
- ↑ Sorenson 1985, pp. 1–48
- ↑ Sorenson 1984a
- ↑ Sorenson 1985, pp. 35–36
- ↑ Sorenson, John L (2000). "Last-Ditch Warfare in Ancient Mesoamerica Recalls the Book of Mormon". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 9 (2): 44–53. doi:10.5406/jbookmormstud.9.2.0044. S2CID 133084122. Archived from the original on 8 December 2006. Retrieved 29 Dec 2014.
- ↑ The History of the Church proclaims the ruins were likely Nephite or belonging to "the ancient inhabitants of America treated of in the Book of Mormon". "Did the Prophet Joseph Smith in 1842 Locate Book of Mormon Lands in Middle America?", by V. Garth Norman - History of the Church Volume 5, pg 44.
- ↑ Stephens, John Lloyd, Incident of Travel In Central America, Vol. II, pp. 442-443
- ↑ Roberts, Jennifer, The Art Bulletin, "Landscapes of Indifference; Robert Smithson and John Lloyd Stephens in Yucatan", September 1, 2000.
- ↑ Wunderli, Earl M (Fall 2002). "Critique of a Limited Geography for Book of Mormon Events" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 35 (3): 161–197. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ Matheny, Deanne G (1994). Metcalfe, Brent Lee (ed.). "Does the Shoe Fit? A Critique of the Limited Tehuantepec Geography". New Approaches to the Book of Mormon: Explorations in Critical Methodology.
- ↑ Sorenson, John L (1994). "Viva Zapato! Hurray for the Shoe!". FARMS Review of Books. 6 (1): 297–361. doi:10.2307/44796960. JSTOR 44796960. S2CID 164585195. Archived from the original on 25 February 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-23.
- ↑ Sides remarks, "As fantastic as it may seem, Sorenson actually argues that there were two Cumorahs: one in Mexico where the great battle took place, and where Moroni buried a longer, unexpurgated version of the golden Nephite records; and one near Palmyra, New York, where Moroni eventually buried a condensed version of the plates after lugging them on an epic trek of several thousand miles" (Sides, Hampton, "This is Not the Place!", Double Take Magazine, Vol. 5, No 2; Also included in his work American: Dispatches from the New Frontier, 2004)
- ↑ See letter from Joseph Smith published in Times and Seasons October 1842, later canonized as the section 128 of the LDS Church's Doctrine and Covenants. In this letter, the Book of Mormon land Cumorah is referenced among other locations of significance near the Finger Lakes. See also Joseph Fielding Smith: Doctrines of Salvation, Volume 3, pp. 233-234; Bruce R. McConkie: Mormon Doctrine; s.v. "Cumorah", p. 175; Mark E. Peterson: Improvement Era, June 1953, p. 423, 123 Annual Conference of the Church, April 4–6, 1953 General Conference Report, pp. 83–84.
- ↑ See also Hill 1995, p. 33"Sir, Considering the Liberal Principles," Joseph Smith to N.C. Saxton, editor, American Revivalist, and Rochester Observer, 4 January 1833 (from Times and Seasons [Nauvoo, Illinois] 5 [15 November 1844], 21:705-707) where Smith stated that the "Western Indians" in the United States are the descendants of Book of Mormon peoples.
- ↑ See also Oliver Cowdery, "Letter Seven," Messenger and Advocate, July 1835—note that Joseph Smith was the editor. In this article, Cowdery argues that the final cataclysmic battle between the Nephites and Lamanites—as well as the final battle of the Jaredites took place at the hill Cumorah in upstate New York.
- ↑ Joseph Smith's published statements indicate that he taught that Book of Mormon peoples or their descendants migrated from "the lake country of America" (near Lake Ontario) to Mexico and Central America. "Traits of the Mosaic History Found Among the Aztaeca Nations", Joseph Smith, Editor, Times and Seasons, June 15, 1842, Volume 3, Number 16, pp 818-820.
- ↑ In 1841 Joseph Smith read Stephens' Incidents of Travel in Central America. Smith held Stephens' work in high regard and recommended it. Letter to John Bernhisel, 16 November 1841, Personal Writing of Joseph Smith, compiled and edited by Dean C. Jessee, p. 533
- ↑ In his "American Antiquities" editorial of July, 1842, Joseph Smith correlates various archaeological finds in North America, South America, and Central America with events and peoples in the Book of Mormon. See the following Times and Seasons editorials: July 15, 1842, Volume 3, number 18, p. 859-60. "A Catacomb of Mummies Found in Kentucky", Vol. 3, No 13, May 2, 1842, p. 781; "Traits of the Mosaic History, Found Among the Aztaeca Nations", Vol. 3, No 16, June 15, 1842, p. 818; "American Antiquties", Vol. 3, No 18, July 15, 1842, p. 858., "Facts Are Stubborn Things", Times and Seasons, September 15, 1842, Vol. 3, No. 22, p. 922. Note that Smith's authorship of these articles has been challenged on some fronts. However, in the March 15, 1842, edition of the Times and Seasons, editor Joseph Smith informed readers, that he would endorse papers with his signature, or editor's mark "ED". Editor, Times and Seasons, March 15, 1842, Vol. 3, No. 9: "This paper commences my editorial career, I alone stand for it, and shall do for all papers having my signature henceforward. I am not responsible for the publication, or arrangement of the former paper; the matter did not come under my supervision. Joseph Smith.
- ↑ Nibley 1988, pp. 439, also Nibley, Hugh, The Prophetic Book of Mormon, pp.272–73
- ↑ Smith 1997, p. 280
- ↑ Ether 15:2
- ↑ Williams, Frederick G. III (1992). Did Lehi Land in Chile? in Reexploring the Book of Mormon. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book. pp. 57–61. ISBN 978-0-87579-600-0. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
- ↑ Hilton & Hilton 1996, pp. 46, 75
- ↑ Aston 1997
- ↑ Potter 1999
- ↑ Chadwick 2005, pp. 197–215
- ↑ See, for example, the documentary Journey of Faith produced by the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies; see also S. Kent Brown, "New Light from Arabia on Lehi's Trail," in Evidences and Echoes of the Book of Mormon, ed. Donald W. Parry, Daniel C. Peterson, and John W. Welch [Provo, Utah: FARMS, 2002], 55–125, especially 81–85, 88–90 ; S. Kent Brown (2003). "New Light: Nahom and the "Eastward" Turn". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 12 (1). Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ Some suggest that either the vowels or consonants between the word Nahom and various derivatives of the root NHM do not represent an accurate correlation. Tanner & Tanner 1996
- ↑ These sites include Salalah Hilton & Hilton 1996, Khor Rori Book of Mormon Explorers Claim Discoveries, Wadi Sayq (west of Salalah near the border of Yemen) and its associated harbor Khor Kharfot Aston 1994
- ↑ Chadwick 2003, pp. 72–83
- ↑ Hilton & Hilton 1996, p. 33, Potter & Wellington 2004
- ↑ Laughton, Timothy (1998). The Maya. London: Duncan Baird Publishers. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-84483-016-9."In the late 1560s the Spanish bishop of Yucatán, Fray Diego de Landa, wrote of the Maya: 'These people also made use of certain characters or letters, with which they wrote in their books of ancient matters and sciences. We found a large number of books written in these characters and, as they contained nothing in which there was not superstition and lies of the devil, we burned them all'".
- ↑ Coe 2002, pp. 199–200
- ↑ Kettunen & Helmke 2005
- ↑ Coe 2002, p. 62
- ↑ Hougey, Hal (1983). Archaeology and The Book of Mormon. Concord, CA: Pacific Publishing.
- ↑ Hemingway, Donald (2000). Ancient America Rediscovered as recorded by Mariano Veytia (1720–1778). Bonneville Books. ISBN 978-1-55517-479-8.Among some of the myths recorded by Veytia are that seven families traveled across the ocean to northern American near the time of the confusion of tongues, and thereafter migrated to Central America (pp. 40, 49-50, 192), the belief that there was a great flood (p. 44), an account of a solar eclipse coincident with a tremendous earthquake which resulted in no human fatalities (p. 148), the arrival of Quetzalcoatl in the company of other bearded men as many as thirty years after the earthquake and eclipse (pp. 152, 154, 164), and the presence of giants in New Spain (pp. 140–41).
- ↑ Sorenson, John L. (2013). Mormon's Codex. Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book. ISBN 978-1-60907-399-2.
- ↑ Exploring the Lands of the Book of Mormon, by Joseph L Allen PhD printed in the United States
- ↑ Ether 10:20-21
- ↑ Sorenson 1985, p. 119.
- ↑ There is no indication that the "walls of stone" mentioned in Alma 48:7 were constructed of hewn stone. The remnants of massive wall piles of stone made by mound builder societies are known to exist in the eastern United States. See for instance May, Wayne N., This Land – One Cumorah, pp. 61–68
- ↑ "BookofMormonEvidence.org". BookofMormonEvidence.org. 2010-08-28. Archived from the original on 2010-12-22. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
- 1 2 Squier 1849
- ↑ For example, Alma 52:2 describes how the Lamanites "sought protection in their fortifications" in the city of Mulek. See Alma 52:2
- ↑ Coe 2002, p. 100"Bekan in the Chenes region just north of the Peten, which was completely surrounded by massive defensive earthworks some time between the second and fourth centuries B.C. These consist of a ditch and inner rampart, with a total height of 38 ft (11.6 m), and would have been formidable ... if the rampart had been surmounted by a palisade."
- ↑ John L. Sorenson (September 1984). "Digging into the Book of Mormon: Our Changing Understanding of Ancient America and Its Scripture". Ensign: 28. Retrieved 2014-12-15.
- ↑ "Becán: Aerial Photo 1". Mayaruins.com. 1999-09-12. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
- ↑ May, Wayne, This Land – Only One Cumorah, Ch. 1, "The Battlefield of Jaredites (and the Nephites) by E. Cecil McGavin and Willard Bean", pg.17, Ch.2 "Cumorah Land", pg. 31
- ↑ Jakeman 1953
- ↑ Clark 1999, pp. 22–33
- ↑ Guernsey 2006, pp. 53
- ↑ Sorenson 1990, p. 12
- ↑ Heywroth, Robin (July 30, 2014), "The Elephants of Copán," Uncovered History. Retrieved October 5, 2017
- ↑ Smith 1925
- ↑ Zidar, Charles "Ancient Maya Zoological Research," Famsi. Retrieved October 5, 2017
- ↑ Tozzer & Allen 2006, p. 343
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Further reading
- Hamblin, William J. (1993), "Basic Methodological Problems with the Anti-Mormon Approach to the Geography and Archaeology of the Book of Mormon", Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, 2 (1): 161–197, doi:10.2307/44758644, JSTOR 44758644, S2CID 133116819, archived from the original on 2014-09-27, retrieved 2014-09-29
- King, David S. (Spring 1991), "'Proving' the Book of Mormon: Archaeology Vs. Faith", Dialogue, 24 (1): 143–146.
- Sorenson, John L. (2006), "Out of the Dust: Steel in Early Metallurgy", Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, 15 (2): 108–109, 127, doi:10.5406/jbookmormstud.15.2.0108, S2CID 254216836.
- Wade, Lizzie (2018-01-18). "How a Mormon lawyer transformed archaeology in Mexico—and ended up losing his faith". Science. doi:10.1126/science.aat0244. ISSN 0036-8075. Retrieved 2018-01-20.