Temple Site Confirm Features Not Natural

2009
20 Feet of Sand in Montrose, Iowa

Is it possible that a Book of Mormon Temple in Zarahemla (Montrose, Iowa) may have been built across the river from Nauvoo, Illinois? Heartland Research Group has been focusing on that question for many years now. The most recent finding is a large pit of sand over 20 feet deep. This sand was found to not be natural like the surrounding earth in that area. Many Resistivity scans by Russian and American Scientists are developing their conclusions now. Stay tuned for their results.

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First Images from Ground of Zarahemla Temple Site Confirm Features Not Natural.

We now have millions of times more data from the ground of the Zarahemla Temple Site.

Dr. Larisa Golovko and Dr. Yuri Manstein presented their results to the public on Monday afternoon, November 22nd, 2021, in the Conference Room of the Quality Inn & Suites in Montrose, Iowa.

Resistivity scans from last week confirmed that large areas in the ground of the Temple Site are not natural. The Russian scientists are among the world’s leading experts in the use of scanning technologies to discover ancient anomalies buried in the ground.

With the latest methods and best practices, they confirmed what Wayne May found at the site is not natural and is likely associated with the activities of people who lived and died on the west bank of the Upper Mississippi more than a thousand years before the European arrival.

These are the first digital images from the ground of the Zarahemla Expedition #3, November 2021. The Russian scientists will prepare formal reports in December 2021 for the Heartland and Research Group. We will make these reports available to scholars and other interested people.

In the future, scholars pushing the frontier of Book of Mormon studies will have to come to grips with the data that is now out of the ground. More data will soon be available from the LiDar scanning of the 34,000 acres tied to the ancient city of Zarahemla. These billions of data points will enlarge our understanding of North America’s most significant lost city.

We appreciate your interest and support. We are encouraged by these results and are determined to move forward as we advance the knowledge of Zarahemla.

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Russian Scientists Meet Native People in Iowa.

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Truth Out of the Earth.

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Zarahemla Temple Site sand 21 feet deep

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