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The 2004 Revised Edition of The Geography of the Book of Mormon by E. Cecil McGavin,
Willard W. Bean and Wayne N. May is an incisive study of the
geographical locations of the three colonies that came to America
in ancient days; and their spreading into North America in what is
now Southern Canada and the country east of the Mississippi River and
south of the Great Lakes. The authors address themselves to the non-scientist,
the ordinary reader and student of religion. The text needs to be studied rather
than just read. Anyone interested in the subject will find the effort thoroughly
worth while.
The thesis centers around a concept of the Prophet Joseph Smith who "was
definitely convinced that the Nephites had spread over North America."
While traveling with Zion's camp near the Illinois River, a skeleton was
found which Joseph Smith identified as Zelph. He explained that Zelph was
a converted Lamanite and became a great warrior of the Nephite armies "from the
eastern sea to the Rocky Mountains." Nearby, as explained by the Prophet, the
Nephite city of Manti had been built. Later when the remains of a stone tower
were found along the Grand River in Missouri, he told his brethren that it
was 'an old Nephite tower."
The
authors of this book maintain that the Nephites spread throughout North
America and the country particularly east of the Mississippi River.
Contiguous to the Great Lakes is where the thousands of people finally
found the land of their desires. The present Hill Cumorah was the
center and here the gold plates were buried to be brought forth in this
day by the visitation of the Angel Moroni, who placed them in the hands
of the Prophet Joseph Smith. Here the great battles were finally fought
between the Nephites and Lamanites, and archeologists of today verify
this idea by their careful investigations.
Levi Edgar Young of the First Council of the Seventy
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