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Currently Out of Print - Limited
Availability at:
- Deseret
Book
- Amazon
Authors: Warren P. & Michaela Knoth Aston
Publisher: Deseret Book Company
Publish Date: August 1, 1994
Early in the Book of Mormon, Nephi wrote, "We did sojourn
for the space of many years, yea, even eight years in the
wilderness. And we did come to the land which we called Bountiful,
because of its much fruit and also wild honey; and all these
things were prepared of the Lord that we might not perish."
(1 Nephi 17:45.)
Now, nearly 2,600 years later, we wonder: Where was Nephi's
Bountiful? Where was Nahom, the place Lehi and his party stopped
to mourn and bury Ishmael? What was the route over which they
traveled?
For more than a decade, a young Australian couple, Warren
and Michaela Aston, have explored the remote deserts and valleys
of the Arabian peninsula, traveling in many areas previously
unvisited by outsiders. What began as a simple desire to see
Lehi's trail for themselves grew into a serious research project
that has yielded remarkable results. Not content to rely on
what others have done, the Astons have brought their combined
love of the scriptures, archaeology, history, and the Middle
East to a focus on the two most important locations mentioned
in Nephi¹s account of Lehi's Arabian odyssey--Nahom and
Bountiful. They demonstrate convincingly that both these places
can now be identified on the modern map.
Juggling their research with the demands of employment and
a young family, the Astons have frequently traveled in dangerous
regions with little more than determination and Nephi's writings
as their guide. As a result, over several years they have
completed a ground survey of the entire east coast of the
Arabian peninsula--a survey that has identified the first
location matching the description of Bountiful.
So impressive are their findings that in 1993 Brigham Young
University and the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon
Studies (F.A.R.M.S.) co-sponsored an expedition team to the
Bountiful site in Oman; further work is planned in the near
future.
Aware that many others may never be able to see these places
for themselves, the Astons have given special attention to
capturing, as far as possible, the atmosphere as well as the
form of locations essentially unchanged since the time of
the Lehites. From among the thousands of photographs taken
over a nine-year period by Warren, a former freelance photographer,
the stunning pictures selected for this book illustrate Lehi¹s
journey as never before.
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