“The project identified 23 sites in the area that soon became the bottom of a series of lakes created by the dam. The Hopewell people would of lived in the back of the mound. Parallels of the Hopewell Culture as described by William C. Mills, Chief Archaeologist of Ohio, with the Book of Mormon [May 20, 1917; Sunday] by James E Talmage “Attended Sunday School and afternoon service in Hawthorne Hall, and was a speaker at each assembly. There should be a wilderness area (Hermounts) west and north of the City of Zarahemla, where the Amlicites fled from the Nephites:36 And they fled before the Nephites towards the wilderness which was west and north, away beyond the borders of the land; and the Nephites did pursue them with their might, and did slay them. 7 p.258). There were 29 mounds at the sites: 20 earth mounds, 9 stone mounds, and several village areas. Review of Wayne N. May's This Land: ... History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, vol. Also on that day, the Dollar Weekly Bostonian published the first in a series of articles written under a false name—a pseudonym—that were part of a scheme to change LDS thinking about the Book of Mormon. We believe that there are good reasons to look on the west bank of the Mississippi in Lee County, Iowa. We already know that there is ancient human habitation in the area as evidenced by existing earth mounds. ... Thousands of huge mounds, used for burial and other purposes. Evening meetings here, as also in Brooklyn, have been discontinued for the summer. It's called Little Mound Cemetary. It snowed in the city that day, the latest snow in Boston history. Saturday, June 11, 1842, was unusually cold in Boston, Massachusetts. From: David Hocking, Rod Meldrum, Jonathan Neville, Boyd Tuttle, Amberli Nelson, Wayne May, and Rian Nelson Whatever you feel is fine with us, but but we strongly believe the Book of Mormon plates were buried in the Hill Cumorah in upstate New York and the last battles of the Nephites happened near that same hill. The Heartland Model of the lands of the Book of Mormon has been promoted since 2004 by Rod Meldrum and Wayne May even before that. For more info please visit www.hillcumorahhistory.com. “One of the most important events in prehistory is the early discovery of America by the ancient Egyptians. I did the research early as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints to determine where the Book of Mormon took place. THREE SPECIFIC MOUNDS FIGURE PROMINENTLY IN LDS HISTORY Zion’s Camp March May 5th to July 3rd, 1834 Nauvoo Mounds Now Enter Current History ... Susan felt sure that we should call Wayne May and tell him of the new discoveries and that we had bought some of the mounds on the hill. Recently an article appeared in Ancient American magazine, describing it. The reasons come from a reading of the Book of Mormon as it relates to the movements of those ancient people as well as from the surface. The scheme would misdirect Book of Mormon … Editorial Position of the Annotated Book of Mormon . ... Scotford, with help from his sons and son-in-law, manufactured the relics and planted them in mounds or turnouts. This was a Hopewell burial mound. The Mystic Symbol by Wayne N. May Publisher of Ancient American Magazine. After dinner Wayne and Rod took us on a surprise mound trip. Diggers might not visit the site for weeks, long enough for weeds and grasses to grow over the spot. All around this Cemetary is corn fields. A chapter from the DVD "Book of Mormon Archaeology in North America" by Wayne N. May showing examples of Book of Mormon Armor and Battle Mound. Wayne is the Editor/Publisher of “Ancient American Magazine”. Twelve of the mounds were found to be burial mounds and 17 had prehistoric structures associated with them.