Mormon's Map Puzzle Solved?
by John P. Pratt
A detailed map for the Book of Mormon has been produced by
archaeologist Garth Norman which may solve a long-standing puzzle.
Haven't you always wanted to have a detailed map of just where everything is
in the book of Mormon? After all, when you read the Bible, you can turn to the
maps and see where everything happened. In fact, you can go and visit most of
those places today. Wouldn't it be wonderful to have maps in the Book of Mormon
where we could follow the action as we read? Unfortunately, we have never had a
detailed map where we can point with confidence to just where the land of Manti
or the River Sidon was. Until now, we have had maps made by a variety of Book of
Mormon scholars which showed general areas, but with very few precise locations
pinpointed. Now that has changed.
This article reviews a new map which indicates some 76 detailed items,
complete with Book of Mormon textual references for each. It comes with an
optional explanatory booklet entitled Book of Mormon - Mesoamerican Historic
Geography, and is available
online in time for Christmas.[1]
It was produced after forty years of research by archaeologist V. Garth Norman,
who has advanced degrees in both archaeology and ancient scripture, and it looks
excellent. It appears that a new day in Book of Mormon geography is now dawning.
Let us review briefly some of the key anchor points used by most scholars for
their proposed maps, and then focus on one particular puzzle that Norman solves
brilliantly.
Map Anchors
How can one go about discovering where it was
in the Americas that the history recorded in the Book of Mormon took place? One
way is a step-by-step "anchoring" method where one builds stone by stone on a
firm foundation. First one lays some solid cornerstones that are key anchor
points, fills in more points that are known relative to them, and then all of
the final details. It is like putting together a jig-saw puzzle. How does one
start? One reliable method is to find the four corner pieces first, then
complete the four borders, and then build in from there to complete the puzzle.
In my work to determine religious chronology I did likewise, first determining
fixed anchor points such as the date of the resurrection of Christ and fall of
Jerusalem, and then reckoning from there to get more anchor points.
Limited Extent
Distances in the Book of Mormon are given in terms of
days of travel. Moreover, many named cities are mentioned, sometimes with their
approximate directional relationship to others. When one looks at the time
stated to travel all the way from the southernmost part to the north, it is only
a matter of weeks (Mosiah 23:3, 20,25), which implies that the greatest
dimension of the entire area is only a few hundred miles.
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Figure 1. A land nearly surrounded by
water.
Narrow Neck of Land
The best summary of the overall description of Book
of Mormon geography is given by Mormon himself in preparation for describing
some detailed wars (Alma 22:27-34). One very distinctive feature he mentions is
that there was a Land Northward and a Land Southward separated by a narrow neck
of land. Thus, we are looking for two lands separated by an isthmus. There are
many such places in the western hemisphere, so we need to look for more clues.
Nearly Surrounded by Water
Another huge clue provided by Mormon is that
the Land Southward was "nearly surrounded by water" (Alma 22:32). It had seas to
the east, south, west and north (Helaman 3:8). No doubt it was for that reason
that some of the first who arrived with Lehi's group believed that they were on
an island (2 Nephi 10:20). Now this added information really limits
possibilities, even without archaeological finds. Figure 1 shows a map drawn by
J. N. Washburn in 1968 showing these two key features, without attempting to
refer to any specific known location.[2]
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Figure 2. Location of Book of Mormon
peoples.
Two Advanced Cultures
The Book of Mormon describes two main groups who
migrated from the Eastern Hemisphere to the Western at very different times to
different places. The first group, called Jaredites, left from the Tower of
Babel (about 2000 BC), migrated north, crossed an inland sea (most likely
Caspian Sea), continued on (most likely to China), and then crossed the great
waters (Pacific) to come inhabit the Land Northward of the Narrow Neck. The
other group (consisting of both Lehi's and Mulek's separate migrations) came
from Jerusalem about 600 BC. We are only told that Lehi's route was basically to
cross Arabia and then the Pacific to land in the Land Southward. During most of
the period described in the book of Mormon, both Lehi's descendants (the
Nephites and Lamanites) and also the Mulekites lived in the Land Southward. For
the period of about 400-200 BC they were in three distinct areas of that land,
with the Mulekites northernmost, the Nephites in the middle, and the Lamanites
in the southern part, where Lehi first landed. Around 300-200 BC the Jaredites
had a huge internal civil war in which that civilization was largely destroyed.
Around AD 400 the Lamanites destroyed the Mulekites and Nephites who had stayed
in that area. Figure 2 shows the approximate arrangement on Washburn's map.
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Figure 3. Mesoamerica archaeology
fits.
Here is where the science of archaeology provides a
great clue to locate the Narrow Neck because we know we are looking for an
isthmus separating two civilizations and we know the time periods in which they
existed. Given this information, there is one isthmus which jumps out as being
the clear front runner. It is the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico. Just
northward of that Narrow Neck lived the Olmecs from about 2000 - 300 BC and
south of it lived the Mayans from about 600 BC until the present day. Moreover,
the land southward is nearly surrounded by water. That is a perfect match of
time and place (see Figure 3). This identification was first emphasized by M.
Wells Jakeman, first head of the BYU Department of Archaeology from 1946-1960.
It has become known as the "Limited Tehuantepec Theory."[3]
Today, nearly all researchers agree with this identification.
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Figure 4. Modern Mesoamerican
countries.
This area comprises the southern part of Mexico
and the northern countries of Central America of Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El
Salvador and part of Nicaragua as shown in Figure 4.
Narrow Wilderness Strip
Now we begin to look at important features about
which there is more disagreement among Book of Mormon scholars. The most
important is probably the location of a strip of wilderness which ran all the
way from the East Sea to the West Sea (Alma 22:27), that is, from the Atlantic
to the Pacific Ocean. At about 100 BC, this strip separated the Nephites and
Mulekites on the north from the Lamanites on the south. It was important
strategically for the Nephites to close off their south border to keep the
Lamanites from overrunning their land. Captain Moroni had seven cities fortified
along this strip for that purpose.
It is fortunate for us that the strip had strategic military importance to
the Nephites because that likely caused this important clue to be included in
the record. What was the nature of the "wilderness"? Does that only refer to
uninhabited jungle areas? One clue is that Moroni only had to fortify cities at
certain locations on the strip in order to secure it, so it must have been
difficult to cross at other places. Before looking for it, let us look at one
more clue.
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Figure 5. Mormon Geography Map.
River Sidon
The only river described in the Book of Mormon is the River
Sidon. It was a large enough river to throw thousands of corpses in after a
battle and have them easily wash out to the sea. It is important in the history
because the great city of Zarahemla, the capital of the Nephite/Mulekite
civilization after they merged, was just west of the Sidon. An important
geographical clue is that the head waters of the Sidon were located at the
Wilderness Strip (Alma 22:29). That tells us two things. First, that area of the
strip is mountainous, because mountains are where rivers begin. Secondly, if the
strip is east-west, then at least part of the Sidon flows north, away from the
mountains. Figure 5 shows Washburn's placement of the river, along with my
addition of the wilderness strip and the city of Zarahemla.
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Figure 6. Narrow Wilderness
Strip(s).
There are not very many places in the western
hemisphere where one can find a mountain range that runs all the way from the
Atlantic to the Pacific. The major mountain ranges tend to run north to south.
This feature is so distinctive that it might have been used as the very first
criterion for location. When we look at the proposed location we find not one
but two possible mountain ranges that run nearly continuously from ocean to
ocean, as shown in Figure 6. Some researchers favor one range and some the
other, and some both together forming the strip.[4]
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Figure 7. Names of Large Areas.
Names of Large Lands
In Mormon's description of the area, he provides
the names of the large areas on the map. The part of the Land Northward near the
Narrow Neck was called Desolation and Bountiful was found just southward of it
(Alma 22:30-31). South of that was the land of Zarahemla, which was separated
from the Land of Nephi in the far south by the wilderness strip (Alma 22:34).
These areas are indicated on both maps in Figures 7 and 8. Now let us turn to
the puzzle.
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Figure 8. Names of Large Areas.
Limhi's Expedition
Before looking for the River Sidon, the
next important landmark to identify, let us turn to one "puzzle" which the
Norman map and explanatory booklet appears to solve. There are actually many
puzzling aspects of Book of Mormon geography, but there is one which has been a
"litmus test" for me in deciding whether or not a proposed map has a chance of
being correct. Allow me to state it as a formal logic puzzle, which you may now
try to solve yourself before reading Norman's solution.
The puzzle is to draw the River Sidon, as well as the location of the city of
Zarahemla, on a Book of Mormon internal map (such as in Figure 7, or your own),
in a way to explain the following weird result of the "Limhi expedition" (see
Mosiah 8:7-11, 21:25-26). To me this account is difficult to explain on any map
at all, so finding a solution on a real map would be compelling evidence both
for the Book of Mormon being a true record, as well as the river and city being
correct. This is to be done strictly as a puzzle; of course any real solution
would need to correlate with archaeological finds and all the other internal
details from the Book of Mormon account. Now consider the details of the puzzle
that you need explain.
The Puzzle
There was a king named Limhi who lived in the southern part
of the Land Southward, called the Land of Nephi. His city was in bondage to the
enemy Lamanites, so he sent an expedition to get help from the great city of
Zarahemla from which his grandfather had come. It was known to be just west of
the River Sidon, and that river was known to have its headwaters not far north
of them in the Wilderness Strip. Even though this new generation might never
have been there, it hopefully wouldn't be too difficult to find given that
information, and the approximate length of time needed. But what happened seems
mysterious indeed.
The expedition got lost (not too hard in a jungle region), found a land of
many waters, and a city that they thought was indeed Zarahemla (Mosiah 21:26).
But alas, the city had been destroyed long enough ago that they found only dry
bones and rusted swords and armor. They were so strongly convinced that they had
found Zarahemla, that they returned to King Limhi with the bad news. Nothing is
mentioned about getting lost on the way home, so apparently that was not a
problem.
Now for the puzzling part. The destroyed city they found was in, or beyond,
the narrow neck of land, in the part of the Land Northward later called
Desolation, which was separated from Bountiful in the Land Southward by the
Narrow Neck (Alma 22:30-32), as shown in Figure 7. The puzzle is to draw
their route and explain just how these trained scouts could have mistaken the
destroyed city for Zarahemla. A solution must include 1) what they probably
knew about what they were looking for, 2) what their plan had been to find it,
3) where the land of many waters was and why it was included, 4) how the
destroyed Jaredite city would have met their criteria, 5) why at no point did
they know that it was not Zarahemla, and 6) what their return route was. Just a
note here from puzzle theory: there are several logic puzzles whose solution is
based on the clue that an intelligent person was baffled by something.[5]
In this case we must explain how the search party had no clue that it was not
Zarahemla and enough reason to think that it was to return and report.
Okay, time to stop reading this article and go do the puzzle yourself. Simply
draw any map with all of the required elements (something like Figure 7) and
draw in your proposed solution of just where the expedition might have gone.
Well, how did you do? Most probably you had a difficult time. The reason the
question was posed here as a formal puzzle is that it is nearly impossible to
come up with any good solution using the map of Figure 7. No matter how one
draws a false route from Nephi to Desolation in the Land Northward, it could
easily have been known that it was not Zarahemla because it was near the ocean
and way too far from the land of Nephi. It was only when I saw Garth Norman's
solution that the answer became clear. To me that in itself is a witness for the
Book of Mormon. That is, when allowed the latitude of drawing any map at all,
one would expect the imaginary map to succeed when the real map fails. But it is
the other way around.
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Figure 9. Two Rivers.
The Proposed Solution
The first part of the proposed solution is to note
that in the ancient world, or even today in any primitive area, the first rule
of traveling without a road is to follow a stream or river if possible. The fact
that we are told that the Sidon had its headwaters near the Wilderness Strip is
tantamount to saying that their instructions were something like, "Find a
headwater tributary of the Sidon and simply follow it for about x (some number
given) days until you come to a huge city on its west side. You can't miss it."
If that were the case then about the only explanation of their confusion is that
they followed the wrong river, which also had headwaters in that same
area, unknown to the grandfathers giving instructions, who had come the
other way. There are more details to the solution, but first let's look at a
real map.
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Figure 10. Intermingled Headwaters near the modern
city of Huehuetenango.
Turning to the map of Mesoamerica,
sure enough, we find two rivers both of which are good candidates for the River
Sidon, and they both have their headwaters nearly intermingled in a pass that
traverses both of the candidates for the Narrow Strip of Wilderness. Today they
are called the Grijalva and Usumacinta Rivers, as illustrated in Figure 9, with
the proximity of their headwaters detailed in Figure 10. This map is slightly
more detailed than Norman's and was produced from combining the information from
several maps from encyclopedias. To me this is a compelling find in support of
the Book of Mormon. Rather than being surprised to find two similar rivers,
the account tacitly predicts there must be at least two such rivers.
Again we could ask, where else in the western hemisphere are there two large
rivers which begin near each other in a coast-to-coast east-west mountain range,
flow in similar directions through similar highland and lowland areas, and hence
could easily be mistaken for each other. Much is implied in a careful reading of
any account, but it is tough to believe that an unschooled youth could come up
with such an implied puzzle which has an ideal solution on a real map, only to
be discovered a century afterward.
If there had only been one candidate for the River Sidon, Book of Mormon
archaeology would probably have progressed much further by now. Because there
are supporters for each of these rivers, the efforts have been divided, and
hence we are unsure of just where Zarahemla was located. With all our modern
technology, we have been almost as confused as Limhi's expedition. M. Wells
Jakeman favored the Usumacinta River, whereas John L. Sorenson, head of the BYU
Dept. of Anthropology from 1978-1986, favored the Grijalva because the
archaeology is better there. He has proposed that the ruins at Santa Rosa were
Zarahemla. Most researchers have followed his lead. Garth Norman, however, has
maintained all along that the Usumacinta is indeed the correct solution.
The one thing on which most researchers agree, however, is the location of
the Land of Desolation, and the area of several destroyed Olmec cities which
might have been confused with Zarahemla. The principal candidates seem to be La
Venta, San Lorenzo, and Tres Zapotes.
Now let us return to the puzzle, and compare each of these two proposed
solutions.
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Figure 11. The Grijalva River as the
Sidon.
The Grijalva as Sidon
If Zarahemla is located at Santa Rosa on the
Grijalva, then the search party would have been expecting a journey of about a
week or two. They took some tributary of the Usumacinta by mistake and ended up
in the lowland "land of many waters" near its outlet to the sea, after some 3-4
weeks. Then, after encountering the sea and no Zarahemla, they went westward for
a week until encountering the Jaredite ruins. On the way home, the could not
have come along the Grijalva, or they would have found the real Zarahemla, so
perhaps they came south across the isthmus and followed the coastline back to
where they could recognize the rest of the way home. Or they could have retraced
their path all the way back. Figure 11 illustrates this scenario, with the path
of the Limhi Expedition shown starting at Nephi, going along the Usumacinta to a
land of many waters, discovering the ruined Jaredite cities, and then returning
home by the coastal option.
Many researchers have accepted this scenario, but to me it has serious
problems for the scouts not to have known that the city was not Zarahemla.
First, the trip home, even if they had gone directly with no wandering would
have been more than twice as far as they would have expected. Second, if
Zarahemla was near Santa Rosa, why would they have thought that a city near the
ocean could have been Zarahemla? That whole lowland area by the sea is a "land
of many waters" from the mouths of the Usumacinta all the way over past Tres
Zapotes. Third, if Zarahemla were so close to Nephi, it is hard to believe that
it was there for at least two centuries without being discovered by the Nephites
and Lamanites.
The Usumacinta as Sidon
Now consider the other possibility, that the
Sidon was the Usumacinta, and that the city of Zarahemla was in the lowlands, in
a the land of many waters. That is Norman's proposal, but he only has the
general area of Zarahemla predicted, roughly as shown by the large fuzzy spot in
Figure 12 (it actually should be even larger, but that was the biggest my
computer could draw). The archaeology remains to be done in that area to
discover the exact location, but this is science at its best, when it predicts
where something will be found.
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Figure 12. The Usumacinta River as the
Sidon.
Again the arrows show the proposed path of the trip
from Nephi to Desolation. The party took the wrong tributary and followed the
Grijalva river until it comes to an impassible gorge. Then it went northwestward
looking for the river, suggesting that they knew that the Sidon flowed in a
northwestward direction. Instead, they found the river leading to San Lorenzo,
which was at that time a destroyed Olmec (Jaredite) city. It would have been
found in exactly the same kind of lowlands and in a land of many waters as they
knew Zarahemla was located, and at about the expected distance from Nephi, and
on the west side of the river. They would not have even needed to continue on to
the sea. Those ruins are in the Narrow Neck, and yet they would not have even
needed to know that there was an isthmus there. Here is the solution in Garth
Norman's own words (names and numbers in parentheses refers to his map):
"They started at the highland valley of Huehuetenango (Cumeni, 34)
where the headwaters of the Usumacinta/Sidon and the Grijalva meet. They took
the wrong river, traveled north down the Grijalva instead of east on the
Usumacinta tributary. When they reached the impassable Sumidaro gorge (later
David crossing, 35), they continued northwest thru the Chiapas depression,
dropped into the lowlands of Tabasco/Bountiful to get back on the Grijalva,
but ended up on the Rio Coatzacoalcos which they mistook for the Sidon. There
they found the Olmec/Jaredite ruins westward from San Lorenzo thru the
southern Veracruz/Cumorah zone that appeared to them to be Zarahemla. The
coastal tropical lowlands in Veracruz matches the coastal lowlands of
Zarahemla in the Usumacinta Palenque district. There could not have been a
better set of circumstances to make the fatal mistake, and there could hardly
be a stronger geographic historic witness for the authenticity of Mormon's
record in Mesoamerica."[6]
To me, Norman's argument is compelling, pending the actual discovery of the
ruins of Zarahemla. My personal expertise is not in archaeology, but rather in
puzzle-solving in general, so to me this is the most likely correct answer to
the puzzle. Their original instructions to find Zarahemla would have been
something like, "Find a tributary of the Sidon near Cumeni and follow it
downstream for about 15-20 days until you come to a large city on the west side
of the river in a lowland area of many waters." It explains how the trip was
about the same distance to San Lorenzo as they had expected to Zarahemla, it was
found west of a large river in a similar lowland setting as Zarahemla, and it
also explains why the detail that they had found a land of many waters was
included. They could have returned by retracing their journey, so there would
have been no trouble returning home. This appears to be an excellent solution to
the puzzle, but it is only one aspect of Norman's research. Let us turn briefly
to his section on linguistics.
Linguistic Clues
In addition to the archaeological and
geographical evidence, Garth Norman has included in his work some twenty
locations where the modern names have roots which can be traced to either Hebrew
or Nahuatl words of the same meaning as his proposed Book of Mormon locations.
His list includes examples like "Sidon" being very similar to the Hebrew word
for fishery (Tsidon), and that Usumacinta has been deciphered from a Maya glyph
to mean "fish river." He notes that in the area where King Lamoni might have
settled in Jershon, there is an ancient Maya city in Belize called "Lamani."
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Figure 13. Tabasco is a state of
Mexico.
This is not an area of my expertise, but allow me
to at least comment on what little I could verify for myself of his claims. His
list of correlated names includes the proposal that "Tabasco," the name of the
state of Mexico where he believes the land of Bountiful was (see Figure 13 for a
map of the states of Mexico). He proposes that "tabasco" comes from both Hebrew
and Nahuatl roots meaning "Bountiful," as was reported in an earlier Meridian
Magazine article.[7]
If correct, that find seems incredibly important. It is as if the archaeologist
traveled to Tabasco looking for the clues that it might have been the Land of
Bountiful, and as he entered, the sign on the road said, "Entering
Bountiful."
Nahuatl is beyond my ken, but I have Strong's concordance of the Hebrew Old
Testament, and can easily check on his Hebrew claim. The English word
"bountiful" appears twice in the Old Testament. In Proverbs 22:9, it is
translated from the Hebrew word "towb," and in Isaiah 32:5 it is translated from
"showa."[8]
Norman suggests that the name Tabasco might be a combination of both words. To
me he has won the point just with the first word. "Tob" is close enough to
Tabasco to merit further research. His linguistic finds alone could prove to be
very important in determining Book of Mormon geography. For reference, Figure 14
shows the geographical and political features together on one map.
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Figure 14. Geographical and Political
Map.
Conclusion
When one tries to fit the history given in the
Book of Mormon to a map of the western hemisphere, one finds an excellent match
geographically, archaeologically, culturally, and linguistically to the area of
southern Mexico and Guatemala as being the setting for most of the record. Most
modern scholars have agreed on the general area, with the main difference of
opinion being the choice of which river best matches the description of the
River Sidon. The current favorite tends to be the Grijalva River, but Garth
Norman has made a strong logical argument in favor of the Usumacinta. It best
explains how the Limhi expedition could mistake a destroyed Jaredite city for
Zarahemla. But the final verdict must await archaeological evidence before one
can be certain. In any case, Norman appears to have created the best map to date
pinpointing where many events might well have occurred. Moreover, he has added
linguistic evidence and detailed references. In the opinion of this reviewer,
none of the other attempts at such a map have done so well. Having a map to
follow the action can really help bring the story to life and to remember the
events by visualizing just where they probably occurred.
Notes
- Norman, V. Garth, Book of Mormon - Mesoamerican
Historic Geography (American Fork, Utah: Ancient America Foundation,
2006), being the Study Text for the Mesoamerica & Book of Mormon
Lands Map available at www.ancientamerica.org/library/media/HTML/7hvlmli5/book%20of%20mormon%20map.htm
- Washburn, J.N., Book of Mormon Guidebook (1968), p.
135.
- See Allen, Joseph L., Exploring the Lands of the Book
of Mormon (Orem, Utah: S.A. Publishers, 1989) for the best summary of this
entire subject. It is thorough, covers many aspects of the field, and is
probably the most objective work at its time.
- Norman selects the southern mountain range as the
wilderness strip, which is very important to his placing of Helam, the town
that Alma founded for his believers.
- See puzzles number 8 and 9 on my webpage entitled "My
Favorite Logic Puzzles" at www.johnpratt.com/items/puzzles/logic_puzzles.html.
- Norman, Mesoamerican Historic Geography , p.7.
- Norman, V. Garth, "A Mesoamerican Place Name for
Bountiful?" Meridian
Magazine (18 July 2006).
- Strong, James, The Exhaustive Concordance to the
Bible (McLean, Virginia: MacDonald Pub.), p. 139, referencing his Hebrew
words 2896 and 7771.