Difference between revisions of "Plants in the Book of Mormon"

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|subject=Wine
 
|subject=Wine
 
|summary=Plants used to make wine.
 
|summary=Plants used to make wine.
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|sublink1=Sorenson: "the Opata of northern Mexico used a drink made from native grapes"
 
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Revision as of 11:15, 13 April 2017

  1. REDIRECTTemplate:Test3

Plants alleged to be anachronistic in the Book of Mormon


Plants alleged to be anachronistic in the Book of Mormon

Summary: Some plants mentioned in the Book of Mormon are not known to exist in the New World. Is this evidence that Joseph fabricated the text based upon his own cultural background? Not at all: None of the Book of Mormon's plant species causes a problem — Spanish conquerors described pre-Columbian products in exactly the terms used by the Book of Mormon. Barley, silkworms, and grapes were known. One of the terms unknown to Joseph's day (the Akkadian sheum) is impressive evidence for the Book of Mormon's antiquity.

Barley

Flax and linen

Summary: Flax for linen.

Neas

Sheum

Silk

Wheat

Wine

Summary: Plants used to make wine.