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Consider the negative parts of using the Gulf of Tehuantepec in Mesoamerica as the Narrow Neck of Land:
1. It is far too wide, covering 140 miles and would not be considered narrow to a normal person. Traveling 20 miles per day (on foot) would take seven days to cross.
2. It runs north and south, not east and west; therefore, it does not divide a land on the north from a land on the south (Alma 22:32).
3. It is not located where the sea divides the land, with the land to the south nearly surrounded by water except for this narrow neck (Alma 22:32).
4. It does not have a sea to the west, nor a sea to the east (Alma 2:32-33).
5. It does not have a sea to the west that would allow a launching of Hagoth’s ships that could take their course northward (Alma 63:6).
6. It does not have a narrow pass as a recognizable feature (Alma 50:34; 52:9).
7. It would be hard to imagine this 140 mile width area being completely blocked by poisonous serpents (Ether 9:31-34).
8. It would be difficult, if not impossible, to fortify this 140-mile width land against an invading army the size of the Lamanites (Alma 52:9).
9. It has no sea at the terminous of the land northward, nor at the terminous of the land southward, yet the land southward was surrounded by water (Alma 22:32
10. It does not have four seas (east, west, north and south)
(Next Post: Further reasons why Tehuantepec cannot be the narrow neck of land)
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