Since I have a snow day, I can respond a bit more to this now. However, there's really not much more to say at this point.
Zak,
No one is disputing that there were pre-columbian horses in the caves. What we - and I believe the scientists - are asserting is that these precolumbian horses were of a Pleistocene dating.
I don't read spanish, but what I've been able to deduce from reading references to it is that Schmidt's article was about the timing of the arrival of human beings in the Yucatan. And note that the Ray article refers to a "new locality" for the horse conversidens, not a new
dating. Apparently this was one of the first findings of that horse in the Yucatan area.
This all reminds me of the The New World apologetics tape I recently watched. It was misleading in the same way that these statements about the "precolumbian horse" are misleading. Here's where I discussed one flagrantly misleading, although technically accurate, statement from that video:
http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... rney+faith
I’ll start with the one most flagrant misrepresentation in the video. Yes, there were many misrepresentations, but this one was the most shocking. Under the special features section, one section is called “The Flora and Fauna of the Book of Mormon Lands”. One of their experts, “Wade E. Miller, Geology and Paleontology” was commenting on the animal life in the Book of Mormon. He said: “They would have found horses here, which are for the most part easily domesticated. The earliest horses in the world were here in North America, and it wasn’t until later, geologically speaking, that they got into the Old World.”
This statement is so inaccurate and misleading it can only be described as either a deliberate lie, or made by a person completely ignorant of the history of the horse in the New World. Since this individual is an expert is paleontology, I’m going to assume that he knew, good and well, that no experts, other than the Mormon fringe and a few other Christian fringe, believe that a visitor to the New World in 600 BC “would have found horses here”.
Now, he’s technically correct to state that the there were early horses here in North America, but omitting the fact that these same prehistoric horses went extinct thousands of years prior to 600 BC is such an egregious, misleading omission it’s best called a lie.
Now, I'm assuming since Miller is an expert in geology and paleontology, that he actually knows that the early horses in the New World went extinct around 11,000 BC. But do the people who are listening to the video, eager for supporting evidence, know that? I'm sure many do not. So this sounds like hard-core, solid evidence of the HORSE in the New World during the Book of Mormon time periods.
Zak, I think that you're doing something similar, albeit inadvertently. Each time you see a scientist refer to "precolumbian horses" you seem to be automatically assuming that they mean horse remains that post-date the extinction and pre-date the arrival of Spaniard horses. Well, they don't. Remember - [i]although you believe that there are in error[/b] - these scientists believe that there were no horses after the extinction of the Pleistocene horse, prior to the arrival of the Spaniards, in the New World. So when they refer to a precolumbian horse, unless they've informed you otherwise, they're talking about the pre-extinction horses.
Sorenson's statement:
(It is true that Sorenson was unimpressed with the idea of Pleistocene curios, for which, he says, the biologist proposing the idea can cite neither evidence nor precedents.)
I'd like to know just what he is asserting is without precedents! It is well known that the Maya (like modern human beings) liked to obtain unusual items (usually unusual because they derived from a different locality or were difficult to obtain). The possession of those unusual items was what differentiated the elites from the commoners, since they lived in an area that usually afforded all the basic necessities of life, with the exception of drought situations. A fossilized horse bone could very well be such an item.