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− | {{Resource Title|Artifacts}}
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− | {{summary}}
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− | |link=Forgeries related to Mormonism/Artifacts
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− | |subject=Artifacts
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− | |summary=
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− | ===== =====
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− | {{SummaryItem
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− | |link=Forgeries related to Mormonism/Bat Creek Stone
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− | |subject=Bat Creek stone
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− | |sublink1=Question: What is the Bat Creek Stone and is it related to Mormonism?
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− | {{SummaryItem
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− | |link=Book of Mormon/Geography/Hoaxes/Burrows Cave artifacts
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− | |subject=Burrows Cave
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− | |summary=The Burrows Cave collection is a group of "artifacts" supposedly found in a Cave in Illinois, named after Russell Burrows, the person who initially found the cave. To this day, Burrows Cave enthusiasts have never demonstrated the existence of the cave. The artifacts contain many obvious hallmarks of modern manufacture, including the so-called "mystic symbol" found on artifacts in the Michigan artifacts collection. This is offered as evidence that the hoaxers deliberately meant to associate these artifacts with the Michigan collection. Some LDS people have fallen prey to those who push these artifacts as genuine.
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− | |sublink1=Question: What are the Burrows Cave artifacts and are they related to Mormonism?
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− | |link=Forgeries related to Mormonism/Joseph Smith and the Kinderhook Plates
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− | |subject=Kinderhook Plates
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− | |summary=A set of small plates, engraved with characters of ancient appearance, were purported to have been unearthed in Kinderhook, Illinois, in April 1843. The so-called "Kinderhook plates" have been something of an enigma within the Mormon community since they first appeared. While there are faithful LDS who take a number of different positions on the topic of these artifacts, most have concluded that they were fakes. This article summarizes some key information that critics often exclude from their discussion of the Kinderhook plates, and the extent of Joseph Smith's involvement.
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− | |link=Book of Mormon/Jordan lead codices
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− | |subject=Jordan Lead Codices
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− | |summary=The Jordanian lead codices are a collection of metal books bound by rings that were discovered in Jordan as reported in the news media in March 2011. They created some excitement in the Mormon community as they appeared to be an analog to the Book of Mormon plates. But, it was soon reported by scholars that the Jordan lead codices were forgeries.
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− | [[en:Forgeries related to Mormonism/Artifacts]]
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− | [[es:Falsificaciones relacionados con el Mormonismo/Artefactos]]
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− | [[pt:Falsificações Relacionadas ao Mormonismo/Artefatos]]
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