The accounts related to Zelph are used as evidence by some
Book of Mormon scholars to suggest that the
Lehites inhabited the entire North American continent as proposed by the Hemispheric Geographical Model, rather than merely portions of Central America as suggested by the
Limited Geography Model. (See also
Archaeology and the Book of Mormon) Although Smith did not mention the Zelph event specifically in his journal, it is clear that during this period he considered the area in which the group was traveling to have been part of the land described in the Book of Mormon. In a letter that Smith wrote to his wife Emma the following day (June 4, 1834), he stated: The whole of our journey, in the midst of so large a company of social honest and sincere men, wandering over the plains of the Nephites, recounting occasionally the history of the
Book of Mormon, roving over the mounds of that once beloved people of the Lord, picking up their skulls & their bones, as a proof of its divine authenticity, and gazing upon a country the fertility, the splendour and the goodness so indescribable, all serves to pass away time unnoticed. Smith's thinking regarding the location of Book of Mormon events may have evolved over time. In the 1842 periodical
Times and Seasons, which names Joseph Smith as publisher, stories about the discovery of ancient Maya ruins on the
Yucatán Peninsula offered evidence to the Book of Mormon's authenticity. Zelph is not an individual mentioned in the Book of Mormon narrative and would therefore not necessarily be associated with any of the events presumed by some people, including many apologists associated with the
Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS), to have occurred in Mesoamerica. The implication of belief in a hemispheric Book of Mormon geography by these men is supported by several references made by Wilford Woodruff. Woodruff writes that he "visited many of the mounds which were flung up by the ancient inhabitants of this continent probably by the Nephites & Lamanites." Woodruff also states that Zelph "that was known from the
hill Cumorah or East sea to the Rocky mountains," thus implying that the hill Cumorah in New York is the same hill Cumorah referred to in the Book of Mormon. Some LDS scholars believe that "hill Cumorah" was Woodruff's term rather than Joseph Smith's, since other accounts refer only to the sea and fail to mention either Nephites or the hill Cumorah. During the 2001 archeological investigation, a skeleton discovered as Burial 1 Skeleton 1 (QL-4904) was found interred on the top of the upper west side of the tumulus, and was one of the last burials in the mound. QL-4904 was thus determined to be the end use of the structure. No intrusive burials (burials after completion of the mound) were observed by archeologists investigating the mound. By radiometric dating it was determined that QL-4904 was interred in 91 AD (Calibrated Range (2σ) AD 58–127). The
Naples-Russell Mound 8 is part of the Napoleon Hollow Archeological District, which consists of twenty-six burial mounds and two possible burial knolls known collectively as the Russell Mound Group. Occupation and burials in the Napoleon Hollow Archeological District existed from 50 BC to 100 AD as determined by extensive radiometric dating. ==References==