Archie Moses
Well-Known Member
Franklin, you Mormon?
Off subject, but it's been long held that Mayans didn't invent the wheel because there was no proof.
Now they find wheeled toy horses. That's kind of strange if there was no wheel and no horse.
Franklin, you Mormon?
It's not even football season, binitarian.
Does quantity > quality make me a better Mormon than you? If yes then would that motivate you?
Lastly, a paper published on PLoS One in 2008 (Shlush et al.) provides important clues about the possible origin of haplogroup X: “No population or geographic region has been identified to date, in which haplogroup X and its major subhaplogroups are found at both high frequency and high diversity, which could provide a potential clue as to their geographic origin. Here we suggest that the Druze population of northern Israel may represent just such a population.”
I thought that was the Incas
link?
I'm too lazy to find a link. Google toy horse + olmec or toltec or something. Archaeological finds in restrictive countries are kind of hard to come by, but it's there. The wheeled toy with the jaguar head is the easiest picture to come up with so don't confuse it.
W. H. Holmes of the Bureau of American Ethnology stated: "Charnay obtained from an ancient cemetery at Tenenepanco, Mexico, a number of toy chariots of terra cotta, presumably buried with the body of a child, some of which retained their wheels. The possibility that these toys are of a post-discovery manufacture must be taken into account, especially since mention is made of the discovery of brass bells in the same cemetery with the toys." (emphasis in original) Holmes, W. H. Handbook of Aboriginal American Antiquities. 1919. pp=20 - as quoted in Roberts 1992, pp. 100
I say steel all the time when I actually mean copper....... sometimes I even say I'm going outside to ride my tapir...... Easy mistake!. Here, let's both share education, this will help you understand archaeology and the Book of Mormon better, hope you like it!.
Although I would LOVE for there to be evidence of chariots or wheeled vehicles, there simply isn't for that time period, let's stay honest here.
Colton, you may need an editor. Or perhaps a firmer grasp on your wandering mind, from which come leaping assumptions, several which are unecessary. I am LDS, a strong believer in fact, and for you to go further and presume reasons why I am not LDS is interesting. I teach several courses at BYU, I've held several callings in the church, my sons are on missions, and so on. So let's keep things pat.![]()
Nahom, end of thread.
We live in SLC and I commute to the Y.If you lied about being a BYU professor, you are almost certainly also lying about being a member of the church, having kids on missions, and so forth.
We live in SLC and I commute to the Y.
Wrong, John. Your mind only thinks I'm in Lindon because that's what it interprets whenever it reads "SLC". That kind of thing happens to everybody, you believe stuff like that right?Fail, again. The real Craig Manscill, BYU professor, lives in Lindon, not SLC.