Evidence #221 | August 2, 2021

Book of Mormon Evidence: Transoceanic Migrations

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Scripture Central

Abstract

The Book of Mormon’s three accounts of Near Eastern colonies migrating to the Americas are consistent with emerging data in support of ancient transoceanic contact.

Transoceanic Migrations in the Book of Mormon

The Book of Mormon records the migrations of three groups of people from the ancient Near East to the Americas—the Jaredites, Lehites, and Mulekites.1 Few specifics are known about the watercrafts or specific paths of travel used in these journeys, but each of them was clearly transoceanic in nature.2

Lehi and His People Arrive in the Promised Land. Image by Arnold Friberg. 

Seafaring in the Ancient Near East

Ancient Near Eastern peoples were no strangers to maritime trade and travel. The ancient Egyptians, Babylonians, and Phoenicians are known to have sailed rivers and seas alike, and the nautical accounts in legendary tales, such as those of Odysseus and Sinbad, seem to reflect real-life experiences to some extent. In regard to ancient Jewish seafaring technology, Raphael Patai has concluded that ancient Jews “in monarchic times [the time of the Solomonic kingdom] were acquainted with large seagoing vessels” and that “they prized such vessels highly.”3

Mosaic of Odysseus facing the Sirens at the Bardo Museum in Tunis, Tunisinia, circa 2nd century AD. Image via Wikipedia. 

Patai noted that “even though the biblical references to ships and seafaring are extremely meager, this does not mean that sea traffic and trade played a correspondingly minor role in the life of the Hebrews in monarchic times.” Thus, Patai insisted, “we are justified in assuming that … once their control extended to the Mediterranean coastline, the Hebrews engaged in shipping and fishing to no less an extent than the other peoples whose towns and villages bordered the Great Sea.”4

Phoenician ship carved on the face of a sarcophagus, 2nd century AD. Image via Wikipedia. 

A Shifting Paradigm

In the past, claims of pre-Columbian transoceanic contact with the Americas were often met with skepticism. With few exceptions, such as the Viking contact with coastal Canada during the 11th century AD or possible Polynesian contact with South America,5 many North American scholars have dismissed such claims as outlandish and lacking concrete historical or archaeological evidence.6 While this skeptical paradigm has persisted in many academic circles, scholars in growing numbers have argued for extensive pre-Columbian transoceanic contacts. 

John L. Sorenson is one such scholar whose lifelong work on pre-Columbian transoceanic contacts has appeared in reputable Latter-day Saint and non-Latter-day Saint scholarly venues.7 Besides arguing for transoceanic contact himself, Sorenson and Martin H. Raish have cataloged an extensive bibliography of academic work that supports the same position.8

A depiction of a funeral boat found on the tomb of Menna, scribe of the king, circa 1422-1411 BC. Image via Wikipedia. 

“It is clear,” Sorenson and Raish argue, “that the technological capacity for transoceanic voyaging has been available at a number of points in the Old World many times in the past. It is both plausible and probable on nautical grounds that numerous voyagers crossed the oceans at multiple points before the age of modern discovery.”9 To support his claims, Sorenson offers abundant biological evidence of transoceanic contacts as well as cultural parallels between peoples of the Old and New Worlds.10 Other fields, such as linguistics, are further strengthening the case for early oceanic migrations.11

Conclusion

As argued by Sorenson, “The long-demanded ‘hard evidence’ … for transoceanic contact now provides overwhelming proof that ancient voyagers made numerous effective contacts across the oceans with significant consequences for the recipient societies.”12 When viewed in light of this emerging paradigm shift, the three transoceanic migrations recorded in the Book of Mormon can be seen as part of a larger pattern of intercontinental exchange which shaped the cultures and environment of the ancient Americas.

While this recent data doesn’t prove the historical accuracy of the specific migrations mentioned in the Book of Mormon, it shows that there is no longer reason to assume that such ancient oceanic crossings were out of the question. The Book of Mormon’s accounts of transoceanic voyages are becoming increasingly plausible over time. 

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