P
ParkerD
Guest
Lax16,Like I said, I have just finished a book on the life of Sacagawea. There is loads of information in that little book about various Indian tribes. The tribes did not number in the hundereds of thousands or the millions!
Every single trible in America??? Parker, we are talking about a huge civilization, not a tribe!!!
All I care about is North America because the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints explained that this is where the battles took place. I for one will not listen to these other “possible locations” because I saw the information from the LDS church myself. As a thinking individual, I can determine that the church has had a very definite teaching as to the location. New York. America (Columbus’ America).
If Jesus appeared to the Natives, word would have spread throughout the tribes.
- So, millions of people show up for a battle…did they die off within two days or did they need to eat, drink and sleep somewhere for a while? 2) They were tent dwellers? 3) But they forged metals into millions of swords and shields? 4) I thought tent dwellers were wanderers? 5) How could they wander after food and have time to make all of the necessary weaponry?
- So these people of the same “tribe” lived apart but came together to fight this battle?
- How come the other Native American tribes that were in living in North America at the time do not speak of the BoM peoples?
Does anybody know how many people were living in North America at the time of the BoM?
One can read about
"before Columbus, Dobyns calculated, the Western Hemisphere held ninety to 112 million people. Another way of saying this is that in 1491 more people lived in the Americas than in Europe.
His argument was simple but horrific. It is well known that Native Americans had no experience with many European diseases and were therefore immunologically unprepared—“virgin soil,” in the metaphor of epidemiologists. What Dobyns realized was that such diseases could have swept from the coastlines initially visited by Europeans to inland areas controlled by Indians who had never seen a white person. The first whites to explore many parts of the Americas may therefore have encountered places that were already depopulated. Indeed, Dobyns argued, they must have done so.
Source:Peru was one example, the Pacific Northwest another. In 1792 the British navigator George Vancouver led the first European expedition to survey Puget Sound. He found a vast charnel house: human remains “promiscuously scattered about the beach, in great numbers.” Smallpox, Vancouver’s crew discovered, had preceded them. Its few survivors, second lieutenant Peter Puget noted, were “most terribly pitted … indeed many have lost their Eyes.” In Pox Americana, (2001), Elizabeth Fenn, a historian at George Washington University, contends that the disaster on the northwest coast was but a small part of a continental pandemic that erupted near Boston in 1774 and cut down Indians from Mexico to Alaska.
cogweb.ucla.edu/Chumash/Population.html
or, another source with other reference sources:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_history_of_indigenous_peoples_of_the_Americas
As to answers to your questions:
- Died within two days.
- many were.
- No–the use of the words “swords” and “spears” and “shields” does not have to mean those were made of metallic material.
- Very good point.
- They scavenged for weapons, plus had spent years in continuous battles so they had weapons that had been made earlier.
- That’s exactly how the scene is described, yes.
- What are you thinking they are going to say? “Some ancestors had great battles”? “Some ancestors came from across the water”? “Some ancestors believed in a Supreme Being”? Those kinds of ancestral stories can be found. Is it proof of the Book of Mormon? No. Is it disproof? No.
These people lived separately from other population groups, although likely there were interactions among other population groups, particularly as the Lamanite numbers were decimated as prophesied. They nearly became “extinct” as to an existing population, based on the prophesies in the Book of Mormon.