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A comment by John Sorenson to the effect that the promised land of the Nephites should be placed in the tropics because of one lone mention of heat in the scriptures (see Alma 51:33) seems to have stuck in the minds of many, for it is the most often asked by those investigating the Cumorah Lands of New York as the proposed setting for the Book of Mormon saga. He said: "The promised and was quite surely located in the tropics since no indication of cold or snow is given in the text while heat is." 1Such a limited criteria for the placement of any prehistoric people in any particular land seems strange to say the least. Moreover, such a supposition would presuppose they enjoyed only hot weather, never cold. But, even people in Mesoamerica, where some place Book of Mormon territory, experienced cold weather at times, not just unrelenting heat. The Popol Vuh claims the Quiche Maya of Guatemala, who some equate with the Nephites, were so cold at times that they nearly froze to death. (See Goetz & Morley, Popol Vuh, p. 176.) Thus, it would seem a little unrealistic to chose any given land as Book of Mormon territory because of a few isolated references to the weather, for all lands experience heat and cold to one degree or another. The reason the weather was not mentioned more often in the scriptures is because the plates of Nephi were to contain only the things of importance, not such mundane things as the weather. Moreover, anyone given the arduous task of engraving on metal plates would not have wasted their energy and time on such trivial matters, and not just as a matter of convenience, but by way of commandment.
Nevertheless, since it is a subject of much interest, a discussion of the weather patterns of the northeast during the Book of Mormon era, both Nephite and Jaredite, seems appropriate here. The Archaic Period The close of the last Ice Age saw the weather patterns in the northeast change from bleak and cold to warmer than it is today which precipitated the melting of the great glaciers covering so much of Canada and the northeastern United States. This warm condition persisted until around 1000 B.C., when it became somewhat moister and cooler, although still warmer than currently. Another drop in temperature took place around the time of Christ and has persisted relatively unchanged until our present day—notwithstanding various fluctuations over the years, such as the little ice age which is thought to have begun somewhere between 1250-1600 and ended around 1900. New York Archaeologist, William A. Ritchie explains that the archaic period, (that being the era of the Jaredites), experienced the latter portion of the hypsithermal episode, which is believed to have considerably surpassed the present in average warmth.2 Moreover, for a thousand years between 2000-1000 B.C., little rainfall came, with the result that the northeast experienced a number of devastating droughts, just as was noted in the account of the Jaredites who lost a great many of their people to the famines which followed.
Ritchie instructs us that when the last remnants of the ice sheets disappeared from the northeast, forests of mixed evergreens and hardwoods covered much of the land. Many of the existing mucklands were shallow lakes in those days, and "the streams flowed clearer, deeper, and certainly more constantly than now due to the thick spongy covering of the forest floor."3 Fossil samples indicate that the relatively warm, humid conditions made it especially favorable for hunting and fishing and gathering wild plant foods, especially fruits and nuts. Ritchie points out that while the expansion of people also took them into lower Ontario, the archaic population was more numerous in New York, with its milder winters and probably more abundant wildlife than in lower Ontario, with the possibility that the weather was becoming increasingly warmer and drier during this era.4 The Nephite Era The weather remained the same during the first 600 years of Nephite occupation in the land, only changing again after the birth of Christ when pollen samples indicate a cool, moist climate phase began to prevail over most of the area,5 much as it does today. Yet, while New York enjoys a temperate climate, the regions to the east of the lakes can sometimes be hit rather hard during the colder winter months. Thus, since Book of Mormon territory appears to extend along much of the region to the east of Lake Erie, there can be little doubt that the Nephites experienced harsh winters at times during the last 384 years of their existence in the land. Yet their summers would have been as moist and hot as they are today as well, a condition hard to travel in, let alone fight in. The time period given the episode which speaks of Teancum’s army successfully overpowering the Lamanites because they were fatigued due to their labors and the heat of the day came in 67 B.C., according to Book of Mormon footnotes, which was before the climate change which took place at the time of Christ. But, whether before or after, the region would have endured hot, humid summers in either case. Thus, it seems foolish to discount New York as a plausible setting for the Book of Mormon saga simply because of one lone reference to the heat of the day, which some speculate can only be referring to the Tropics. People still die in New York in the summer months, due to the heat and high humidity. And it came to pass that when the night had come, Teancum and his servant stole forth and went out by night, and went into the camp of Amalickiah; and behold, sleep had overpowered them because of their much fatigue, which was caused by the labors and heat of the day. (Alma 51:33.) Such hot moist conditions also promote the spread of various fevers in the land, another fact mentioned in the scriptures (see Alma 46:40). Malaria is a bad fever, and has plagued the people of the northeast for centuries. Literally hundreds died of the dread disease while building New York’s Erie Canal. Regardless of the hot moist summers and the heavy snowfall which falls in New York at times, the state is still said to enjoy a temperate climate. But, even in the harshest conditions, Native Americans have been inhabiting this region for millennium and have survived nicely without central heating or electricity. Moreover, Joseph Smith, as well as numerous early Saints lived in New York without such conveniences and without complaint until forced from their homes by angry mobs. Thus, the Nephites no doubt also lived comfortably in the region after the weather turned cooler. The lush timberlands surrounding them would have provided them with plenty of firewood to keep them just as warm as the pilgrims and early gentile settlers of the past few centuries. As for Alma 3:5 referring to the Lamanites wearing nothing more than loin clothes, the Native American Indians in New York continued that practice until modernized by the Gentiles who made every effort to civilize them. Many of the early colonizers were amazed by the Indians ability to go so scantily clad even during some of the harshest winters without the cold seeming to bother them. Yet, we must not overlook the fact that the scriptures also refer to the Lamanites wearing heavy clothing made from animal skins, which was the more common dress among them during colder weather.
Now, contrary to the popular notion, heat was not the only weather condition mentioned in the scriptures; hail, which we can associate with cold weather, was also mentioned, once when the prophet Abinadi prophesied hail would be sent down to smite them (see Mosiah 12:6), and a second time when Helaman mentions hail in a discourse to his sons. (See Helaman 5:12). Why mention such weather if they had not experienced hail during their lifetimes? Snow is also mentioned in the Book of Mormon, but only allegorically. "And it came to pass that the Spirit said unto me: Look! And I looked and beheld a tree; and it was like unto the tree which my father had seen; and the beauty thereof was far beyond, yea, exceeding of all beauty; and the whiteness thereof did exceed the whiteness of the driven snow." (1 Nephi 11:8.) But, we must remember that Nephi recorded the vision of the tree of life, a vision formerly shown his father, after he had landed in the promised land, had secured the metal to make plates, and began the process of recording the history of their flight from Jerusalem and arrival in a land described as "choice above all others. Snow is not common in Jerusalem, let alone snow driven about by the wind and cold one would naturally have seen in the regions of the Great Lakes, notwithstanding it was still somewhat warmer in the northeast until around the time of Christ. Rain, or the lack of it, is also mentioned, usually in reference to the Lord’s sending it or withholding it according to the righteousness of the people. Thus, we have a variety of weather patterns mentioned in the Book of Mormon, heat, rain, hail, and snow, the same weather patterns found in New York State.
End Notes: 1-John Sorenson, The Geography of Book of Mormon Events: A Source Book, p. 351. F.A.R.M.S. 2-William A. Ritchie, The Archaeology of New York State, p. 32. 3-William A. Ritchie, Indian History of New York State, Ed Leaflet, No. 6, p. 6. 4-William A. Ritchie, Indian History of New York State, Ed Leaflet, No. 6, p. 10. 5-William A. Ritchie, Prehistoric Archaeology and the New York State Museum Ed Leaflet, No. 22, p. 5.
Copyright © 1998 by Phyllis Carol Olive
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