FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Pages that link to "Template:Endnotes sources"
The following pages link to Template:Endnotes sources:
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Source:Brown:Nahom and the "Eastward" Turn:JBMS 12:1 (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Damrosch:The Narrative Covenant:Naham means "to mourn" (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Nibley:CW06:Ch19:9:Mourning by the daughters of Ishmael (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:23:Old world Bountiful (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:24:Old world Bountiful - fruit (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:25:Old world Bountiful - honey (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:26:Old world Bountiful - timber (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:27:Old world Bountiful - mists (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:28:Old world Bountiful - ore (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Echoes:Ch5:12:First camp to Nahom - Mountains (transclusion) (← links)
- The Family: A Proclamation to the World (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is the Mormon document "The Family: A Proclamation to the World" official doctrine? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Has the Latter-day Saint ("Mormon") ''Proclamation on the Family'' been taught frequently? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Have the doctrines in the Mormon document "The Family: A Proclamation to the World" long been taught in the Church? (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Sorenson:Ancient American Setting:297-298:Elephants (transclusion) (← links)
- Johnson: "Probably it is safe to say that American Proboscidea have been extinct for a minimum of 3000 years" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "This was long enough to bring them (mammoths) to the time of the Jaredites" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "Evidence for the survival of the elephant can be found in Native American myths and traditions" (transclusion) (← links)
- Wikipedia: Mammoths "were members of the family Elephantidae" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "There is an animal which they call chic, wonderfully active, as large as a small dog, with a snout like a sucking pig. The Indian women raise them" (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Sorenson:Ancient American Setting:289-290:Swine (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "two distinct species of peccary live in Mesoamerica....They were hunted and eaten as early as Olmec times" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "there are sheep native to America. The most common type is the Mountain Sheep, Ovis canadensis" (transclusion) (← links)
- Wikipedia: Bighorn sheep "crossed to North America over the Bering land bridge" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "The Miami Indians, for example, were unfamiliar with the buffalo and simply called them 'wild cows'" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "Evidence of goats associated with pre-Columbian man also comes from caves in Yucatan" (transclusion) (← links)
- Miller and Roper: "In post-biblical Jewish literature some Jewish writers distinguished between wild and domestic cattle such as goats" (transclusion) (← links)
- Pietro Martire d'Anghiera (1912): "the Spaniards noticed herds of deer similar to our herds of cattle" (transclusion) (← links)
- Wikipedia: Amaranth and the Aztecs (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: The grain "Amaranth" in Mexico (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: Linen and silk textiles in ancient America (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Is prophecy only available for "after the fact" confirmation that God has acted? (transclusion) (← links)
- Book of Mormon/Warfare/Weapons/Cimeters (transclusion) (← links)
- Armitage: "It is suggested by de Ávila Blomberg that wild silk was used in Oaxaca in pre-Columbian times" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson and Smith: "three types of wild barley have long been known to be native to the Americas" (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Robert F. Smith:Some 'Neologisms' from the Mormon Canon:Sheum (transclusion) (← links)
- Source:Roper:Right on Target: Boomerang Hits and the Book of Mormon:FairMormon Conference 2001:Sheum (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "linen-like cloth made from plants other than flax" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: "At the time of the Spanish conquest, natives in Mexico would gather cocoons from a type of wild silkworm and spin the thread into expensive cloth" (transclusion) (← links)
- Head: "The indigenous American bee is the melipona (a stingless bee). It produces only about one kilogram of honey per year" (transclusion) (← links)
- Padilla et al.: "The maya codex Tro-Cortesianus shows drawings of bees and parts of honey combs" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Should there be no offices in the priesthood? (transclusion) (← links)
- Gardner: "a correct approach to a Mesoamerican battle required all three elements: king, litter, and battle beast" (transclusion) (← links)
- Verses in the Book of Mormon that talk about "horses" (transclusion) (← links)
- Sorenson: Horse bones in Yucatan "considered to be pre-Columbian on the basis of depth of burial and degree of mineralization" (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Why don't potential pre-Columbian horse remains in the New World receive greater attention from scientists? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Have any ancient horse remains from the Nephite period been found in the New World? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: What role do horses ''not'' play in the Book of Mormon? (transclusion) (← links)
- Question: Could ancient Americans have expanded the definition of "horse" to include new meanings? (transclusion) (← links)
- Martin: "no theoretical reason why a herd of mastodons, horses, or ground sloths could not have survived in some small refuge until 8000 or even 4000 years ago" (transclusion) (← links)