Information from the
National Museum of Natural History
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20560
Your recent inquiry concerning the Smithsonian
Institution's alleged use of the Book of Mormon as a scientific guide has been
received in the Smithsonian's Department of Anthropology.
The Book of Mormon is a religious document and not a
scientific guide. The Smithsonian Institution has never used it in
archeological research and any information that you have received to the
contrary is incorrect. Accurate information about the Smithsonian's position is
contained in the enclosed "Statement Regarding the Book of Mormon,"
which was prepared to respond to the numerous inquiries that the Smithsonian
receives on this topic.
Because the Smithsonian regards the unauthorized use of
its name to disseminate inaccurate information as unlawful, we would appreciate
your assistance in providing us with the names of any individuals who are
misusing the Smithsonian's name. Please address any correspondence to:
Anthropology Outreach Office
Department of Anthropology
National Museum of Natural History MRC 112
Smithsonian Institution
Washington, DC 20560
PREPARED BY
THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
1996
STATEMENT REGARDING THE BOOK OF
MORMON
1. The Smithsonian Institution has never used the Book of
Mormon in any way as a scientific guide. Smithsonian archaeologists see no
direct connection between the archaeology of the New World and the subject
matter of the book.
2. The physical type of the American Indian is basically Mongoloid, being
most closely related to that of the peoples of eastern, central, and
northeastern Asia. Archaeological evidence indicates that the ancestors of the
present Indians came into the New World--probably over a land bridge known to
have existed in the Bering Strait region during the last Ice Age--in a
continuing series of small migrations beginning from about 25,000 to 30,000
years ago.
3. Present evidence indicates that the first people to reach this continent
from the East were the Norsemen, who briefly visited the northeastern part of
North America around 1000 A.D. and then settled in Greenland. There is no
evidence to show that they reached Mexico or Central America.
4. None of the principal Old World domesticated food plants or animals
(except the dog) occurred in the New World in pre- Columbian times. This is one
of the main lines of evidence supporting the scientific premise that contacts
with Old World civilizations, if they occurred, were of very little
significance for the development of American Indian civilizations. American
Indians had no wheat, barley, oats, millet, rice, cattle, pigs, chickens,
horses, donkeys, or camels before 1492. (Camels and horses were in the Americas, along with the bison, mammoth, and mastodon, but all these animals became extinct around
10,000 B.C. at the time the early big game hunters traveled across the Americas.)
5. Iron, steel, glass, and silk were not used in the New World before 1492
(except for occasional use of unsmelted meteroic iron). Native copper was
worked in various locations in pre- Columbian times, but true metallurgy was
limited to southern Mexico and the Andean region, where its occurrence in late
prehistoric times involved gold, silver, copper, and their alloys, but not
iron.
6. There is a possibility that the spread of cultural traits across the
Pacific to Mesoamerica and the northwestern coast of South America began
several hundred years before the Christian era. However, any such
inter-hemispheric contacts appear to have been the results of accidental
voyages originating in eastern and southern Asia. It is by no means certain
that even such contacts occurred with the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, or other
peoples of Western Asia and the Near East.
7. No reputable Egyptologist or other specialist on Old World archeology,
and no expert on New World prehistory, has discovered or confirmed any
relationship between archeological remains in Mexico and archeological remains
in Egypt.
8. Reports of findings of ancient Egyptian, Hebrew, and other Old World
writings in the New World in pre-Columbian contexts have frequently appeared in
newspapers, magazines and sensational books. None of these claims has stood up
to examination by reputable scholars. No inscriptions using Old World forms of
writing have been shown to have occurred in any part of the Americas before 1492 except for a few Norse rune stones which have been found in Greenland.
In contrast the following is an
excerpt from a Smithsonian letter concerning the Judeo/Christian Bible…“The
Smithsonian’s department of Anthropology has received numerous inquiries in
recent years regarding the historicity of the Bible…Much of the Bible, in
particular the historical books of the old testament, are as accurate
historical documents as any that we have from antiquity and are in fact more
accurate than many of the Egyptian, Mesopotamian, or Greek histories. These
Biblical records can be and are used as are other ancient documents in archeological
work. For the most part, historical events described took place and the
peoples cited really existed.”
Which will you follow?
Testing the Book of Mormon
Some members of the Mormon Church have
made fantastic claims about archaeologists using the Book of Mormon. For
example, one letter written by a prominent Mormon, dated May 3, 1936,
maintained that the Book of Mormon was used by "the government to unravel
the problem of the aborigines.… it was 1920 before the Smithsonian Institute
officially recognized the Book of Mormon as a record of any value.… it is true
that the Book of Mormon has been the guide to almost all of the major
discoveries.... This record is...recognized by all advanced students in the
field."
Because of many false statements
disseminated by members of the Mormon Church, such as the one cited above, the
Smithsonian Institution has been forced to publish a statement concerning these
matters. The four-page statement begins with a denial of the claims put forth
by Mormon enthusiasts: "1.The Smithsonian Institution has never used the
Book of Mormon in any way as a scientific guide. Smithsonian archeologists see
no direct connection between the archeology of the New World and the subject
matter of the book." ("Statement Regarding The Book of Mormon,"
Smithsonian Institution, Spring 1986)
In 1973, Michael Coe, one of the best
known authorities on archaeology of the New World, wrote an article for
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Summer 1973. After telling of the Mormon
belief in Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon, he frankly stated: "Let me
now state uncategorically that as far as I know there is not one professionally
trained archaeologist, who is not a Mormon, who sees any scientific
justification for believing the foregoing to be true,... nothing, absolutely
nothing, has ever shown up in any New World excavation which would suggest to a
dispassionate observer that the Book of Mormon... is a historical document
relating to the history of early migrants to our hemisphere." (pp.42, 46)
Some Mormon scholars are beginning to
publicly admit that archaeology does not furnish any significant evidence for
the Book of Mormon. Dee F. Green, who at one time served as editor of the
University Archaeological Society Newsletter, published at the church’s Brigham
Young University, made it plain that archaeological evidence did not prove the
Book of Mormon: "The first myth we need to eliminate is that Book of
Mormon archaeology exists…. If one is to study Book of Mormon archaeology, then
one must have a corpus of data with which to deal. We do not. The Book of
Mormon is really there so one can have Book of Mormon studies, and archaeology
is really there so one can study archaeology, but the two are not wed. At least
they are not wed in reality since no Book of Mormon location is known with
reference to modern topography. Biblical archaeology can be studied because we
do know where Jerusalem and Jericho were and are, but we do not know where
Zarahemla and Bountiful (nor any other location for that matter) were or are.
It would seem then that a concentration on geography should be the first order
of business, but we have already seen that twenty years of such an approach has
left us empty-handed." (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Summer
1969, pp. 77-78)
Thomas Stuart Ferguson was one of the
most noted defenders of Book of Mormon archaeology. Mr. Ferguson planned the
New World Archaeological Foundation which he hoped would prove The Book of
Mormon through archaeological research. The Mormon Church granted hundreds of
thousands of dollars to this organization, but in the end, Thomas Stuart
Ferguson admitted that although the Foundation made some important
contributions to New World archaeology, all his work with regard to the Book of
Mormon was in vain. He admitted, in fact, that he had wasted twenty-five years
of his life trying to prove the Book of Mormon. In 1975 Ferguson prepared a
29-page paper in which he wrote: "I'm afraid that up to this point, I must
agree with Dee Green, who has told us that to date there is no Book-of-Mormon
geography." In a letter to Mr. & Mrs. H.W. Lawrence, dated Feb. 20,
1976, Thomas Stuart Ferguson plainly stated: "…you can’t set Book of
Mormon geography down anywhere - because it is fictional and will never meet
the requirements of the dirt-archeology."
Dr. Ray T. Matheny, professor of
Anthropology at the church’s Brigham Young University, admitted that he has a
difficult time reconciling New World archaeology with the Book of Mormon:
"I really have difficulty in finding
issue or quarrel with those opening chapters of the Book of Mormon [i. e., the
first 7 chapters which only relate to Lehi and his family around the area of Jerusalem]. But thereafter it doesn't seem like a translation to me.... And the
terminologies and the language used and the methods of explaining and putting
things down are 19th century literary concepts and cultural experiences one
would expect Joseph Smith and his colleagues would experience. And for that
reason I call it transliteration, and I’d rather not call it a translation
after the 7th chapter. And I have real difficulty in trying to relate these
cultural concepts as I've briefly discussed here with archeological findings
that I'm aware of....
"If I were doing this cold like John
Carlson is here, I would say in evaluating the Book of Mormon that it had no
place in the New World whatsoever. I would have to look for the place of the
Book of Mormon events to have taken place in the Old World. It just doesn't
seem to fit anything that he has been taught in his discipline, nor I in my
discipline in anthropology, history; there seems to be no place for it. It
seems misplaced. It seems like there are anachronisms. It seems like the items
are out of time and place, and trying to put them into the New World. And I
think there’s a great difficulty here for we Mormons in understanding what this
book is all about." ("Book of Mormon Archeology," Response by
Professor Ray T. Matheny, Sunstone Symposium, August 25, 1984, typed copy
transcribed from a tape-recording, pp. 30-31)
Three years after speaking at this
symposium, Dr. Matheny wrote a letter in which he made it clear that there was
still no Book of Mormon archaeology:
"While some people choose to make
claims for the Book of Mormon through archaeological evidences, to me they are
made prematurely, and without sufficient knowledge.
"I do not support the books written
on this subject including The Messiah in Ancient American, or any other. I
believe that the authors are making cases out of too little evidence and do not
adequately address the problems that archaeology and the Book of Mormon
present. I would feel terribly embarrassed if anyone sent a copy of any book
written on the subject to the National Museum of Natural History - Smithsonian
Institution, or other authority, making claims that cannot as yet be
substantiated.… there are very severe problems in this field in trying to make
correlations with the scriptures. Speculation, such as practiced so far by
Mormon authors has not given church members credibility." (Letter by Ray
T. Matheny, dated Dec. 17, 1987)
While there is no archaeological evidence
to support the Book of Mormon’s claim that there were Nephites in the New
World, the existence of the Israelites in the Holy Land is verified by a great
deal of evidence. The "earliest archaeological reference to the people of Israel" is a stele of the Egyptian ruler Merneptah, dated about 1220 B.C. Many ancient
inscriptions mentioning the Israelites have been found, and some inscriptions
even give the names of kings or other people mentioned in the Bible. The New
Testament mentions a number of rulers that are known to have lived around the
time of Christ. The fact that the Jews were in Palestine at the time the Bible
indicates is proven by hundreds of ancient Hebrew inscriptions. Portions of
every book of the Old Testament, except for the book Esther, have also been
found in the manuscripts known as the Dead Sea Scrolls. When we turn to the
Book of Mormon, however, we are unable to find any evidence at all that the
Nephites ever existed.
NOTE: In a letter responding to the historicity of the Bible, they have a paragraph that reads: " Much of the Bible, in particular the historical books of the old testament, are as accurate historical documents as any that we have from antiquity and are in fact more accurate than many of the Egyptian, Mesopotamian, or Greek histories. These Biblical records can be and are used as are other ancient documents in archeological work. For the most part, historical events described took place and the peoples cited really existed. This is not to say that names of all peoples and places mentioned can be identified today, or that every event as reported in the historical books happened exactly as stated.”