

These were common in Babylon in Ezekiel’s day.ĩ:03. The word translated as “stick” in Ezekiel 37:16 should more accurately be translated “wood.” And since this translation, wooden tablets upon which records were written have been discovered. Squier, Antiquities of New York, The Smithsonian,1851, pp. The number of still remaining bones, and particularly the vast fortifications and battle weapons in the area, caused prominent early settlers to declare that there must have been a great “war of extermination” once held there. For references to the still great numbers of bones see the research by Willard Bean, This Land: Willard’s Cumorah Land, Ancient America Archaeology, Colfax, WI, 2012, pp. And settlers continually plowed, or tore up vast numbers of bones, as they settled the area. In spite of this, early settlers and surveyors made references to still large caches of bones found in pits, in fortifications, etc.

Bones can disintegrate in just a few decades if exposed to air, to humidity and to acidic soil. All the references to bones: The Book of Mormon tells that one set of people in America were annihilated some time around 421 A.D., near Palmyra, New York, which would have left a vast number of bones.

Paul’s statement that there was a veil over the Old Testament can be found in 2 Corinthians 3:12-14.ġ:36 For further information on David Limbaugh, The Emmaus Code, see Regnery Publishing, Washington, DC., 2015.ĥ:45.
