Using strictly the scriptures, I
would like to ask the following questions of those many Theorists who claim their pet theories about the
location of the Land of Promise are consistent with the scriptural record.
This nineteenth question is a
follow-up question to #18, which is found in the last post, and is also
directed to Phyllis Carol Olive and her Great Lakes Theory as well as Rod L.
Meldrum and his Heartland Theory.
The question to ask
is quite simple and strictly scripturally based:
19. “Where are the volcanoes throughout the Land
Southward and the Land Northward that erupted during the crucifixion of the
Savior in the Land of Promise and spewed out smoke, vapor, gasses, and dust
that caused a thick darkness upon all the face of the land, insomuch that the
inhabitants thereof who had not fallen could feel the vapor of darkness” (3
Nephi 8:20).
In South America, from Colombia to Chile,
there are at least 137 volcanoes in the Andean Volcanic Belt; 19 in Colombia,
55 in Ecuador, 62 in Peru and Chile. There
are no recent volcanic structures in the U.S. east of the Mississippi, but
there were several ancient volcanic structures in the eastern U.S. dating back
millions of years, especially in Virginia, the White Mountains of New
Hampshire, and in eastern Vermont and Maine.
First, as for
volcanoes, the eastern United States is relatively free from such geology, with
a few exceptions. Mole Hill in Virginia’s east coast where some volcanic rock
and magma has been found dating to a much earlier date than 200 million years
ago when geologists claim Pangaea slowly pulled apart into North America,
Africa and South America. However, Virginia is a long way from western New York
and the Heartland.
Second, in the Land
of Promise, after the quaking, there descended “a thick darkness upon all the
face of the land and the people could feel the vapor of darkness (3 Nephi
8:20), which is called ”astonishingly thick air” by Spinden and Sieberg, and
Knop claims “reduces visibility to a few feet and makes breathing a nightmare.”
Third, this vapor is
described and interpreted as being the smoke and gasses consistent with
volcanoes erupting, and according to John Lear (Saturday Review Nov 5 1966,)
was responsible for quenching all lamps during the 1400 B.C. destruction of the
Greek Island Thera (now called Santorini).
A progression of pictures showing (top)
Mount St. Helen’s eruption May 18, 1980. Note the top picture with its cloud,
debris and ash covering everything but the top after everything settled. Also,
the middle pics show a distance shot with the smoke and debris covering the
miles in between, so thick that buildings could hardly be seen from across the
street. Bottom also shows the effect of the smoke, debris and white ash almost impenetrable on the streets of nearby Yakima (50 miles away), which was dark at 3:00 pm
Fourth, the explosion
and eruption of Mt. St. Helen’s in 1980 points out the effect of a single volcano eruption, which sent clouds
of black smoke and ash 80,000 feet into the atmosphere that lasted about ten
hours (with lateral force at 300 mph), and the explosion of steam, ash and
rock debris heard hundreds of miles away, which deposited fallout all across
eastern Washington and ten other states. Dark skies, black clouds, ash, dust,
stream and hot gasses (mostly sulfureted hydrogen gas) covered the area.
The grey area shows the spread of the
fallout from Mt. St. Helen’s eruption covering eleven states
Fifth, a recorded
eruption of the Conseguina volcano in Nicaragua in 1835 gives us some insight
into the terror and destruction that resulted from the powerful disaster at the
time of Christ’s crucifixion, when a dense cloud first rose above the mountain
cone, and within a couple of hours “it enveloped everything in the greatest
darkness, so that the nearest objects were imperceptible.” Unable to see, wild
animals plunged into settlements, quakes described as a “perpetual undulation”
followed, and then volcanic ash began to fall, like “fine powdered flour.” All
the while thunder and lightening continued the entire night and following day.
The period of darkness and tremors lasted for a reported forty-three hours.
Sixth, another
example, this one from the snow-covered symmetrical stratovolcano called Cotopaxi,
in Ecuador, where 86 known eruptions in historical times makes this one of
Ecuador’s most active volcanoes. The first recorded eruption was in 1534,
several in the 18th century, and during the 19th century
the town of Latacunga was leveled twice. Its eruptions often produce
pyroclastic flows and destructive mud flows (lahars), some of which have
travelled more than 62 miles and reached the Pacific to the west and the Amazon
Basin to the east. One of the largest eruptions of Cotopaxi in historic times was
on July 3, 1880, in which it was reported “an inky black dust cloud of ash rose
from the crater straight up to a height of 20,000 feet in less than a minute,
and then spread out with the wind.”
The column continued
to rise for more than an hour, and the dust, estimated at no less than two million tons, was distributed over hundreds of
square miles. The British explorer
Edward Whymper was climbing Chimborazo at the time of the eruption and was at
15,800 feet when he reported extremely vivid and strange light and color
effects when the large ash plume drifted over him: "... several hours
passed before the ash commenced to intervene between the sun and ourselves; and,
when it did so, we witnessed effects which simply amazed us. We saw a green
sun…no words can convey the faintest idea of the impressive appearance of these
strange colors in the sky, seen one minute and gone the next, resembling
nothing to which they can be properly compared, and surpassing in vivid
intensity the wildest effects of the most gorgeous sunsets."
Seventh, history has
borne out the fact that the descriptions given by Nephi of the terrible
destruction and events at the time of the Savior’s crucifixion were very real
and with obvious precedent. Inky black darkness filled the sky, thick, heavy
air snuffed out all light and fire, and lightening and thunder continued for
days as a result of volcanic eruptions.
So we ask again, “Where are the volcanoes throughout the Land
Southward and the Land Northward that erupted during the crucifixion of the
Savior in the Land of Promise and spewed out smoke, vapor, gasses, and dust
that caused a thick darkness upon all the face of the land, insomuch that the
inhabitants thereof who had not fallen could feel the vapor of darkness” (3
Nephi 8:20).
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