Water Dog wrote:Jokes aside, we now literally have aerial photographs of ancient american civilizations. Mountains and mountains of data which describes a civilization that severely at odds with the Book of Mormon narrative. I'm just waiting for someone to write a decent book, something like Guns Germs Steel, that puts things in context and paints a picture of what those civilizations were really like.
There is mountains of data, there are papers by full time archeologists that show who these people were and how they lived. There are Museums full of tangible evidences of who these people were.
Mopology however ignores what evidence is available, to build a narrative on...and chooses to concentrate on possibilities...basically an "emperors new clothes" mentality.
Some years ago I spent some time e-mailing working archeologists in Mesoamerica and asked them questions about the Book of Mormon and what they are finding...and I received some very interesting feed back...I posted some of them here. It would be interesting to follow up on those with the current LIDAR finding and see what they have to say.
A common comment from some of the archeologists that responded to me was that "mopologists" were racists in that they discredit the Mayans and other Mesoamerican people as being capable to accomplish what they did.
For anyone interested that missed these e-mails the first time I posted them, the last link is really a good one.
I can admit now in the last link, that I edited it to make "him" a "her" in that I was not sure that he would want me posting this publicly. He was actually in the field in Mesoamerica, and enjoyed the conversation as something to do a night.
Also at the time, I was managing on a project, and while digging a plumbing trench discovered what turned out to be a 9000 plus year old burial of a full skeleton. It gets complicated after that in that it was an Native American burial site on university property, and protected from the university that he worked at, and there was a potential legal battle pending as to rights for the body that I discovered. In the end the University lost and did not get to examine the body, although it cost then half a million dollars or more to exhume.They had to pay for private independent archeologist under the control of NA monitors, and delays to the project.
At any rate we discussed it in confidence on both sides in that I could have got in trouble for discussing it while the excavation was underway.
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Don't take life so seriously in that " sooner or later we are just old men in funny clothes" "Tom 'T-Bone' Wolk"