Jump to content
Seriously No Politics ×

Looking for a reference of Nihm dating to 600 BC


Recommended Posts

Posted

Mr. MDalby told me, 

Quote

SamTheIrrational

Sam, if you are sincerely searching for the answers you can use this new thing called Google. It is really quite handy. Let me make this a little easier for you.

Sam - Look here

Next you will want us to provide a Cliffs Notes and highlight it for you.

https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/3879/3304

I am looking for a reference that confirms Nihm tribe dates to 600 BC, the link that MDalby shares above says nothing about the Nihm tribe. Nihm and Nhmyn  are not necessarily the same, Nhmyn can mean stone mason. If no one has a link (a research we can check and read for ourselves)  then the moderators can close the thread. 

No need for the name calling, I know I am a very intelligent person. No replies other than an online reference I can verify please. 

 

Posted (edited)

Warren P. Aston published a paper in the Journal of Arabian Studies, Volume 4, Issue 1 entitled "The Origins of the Nihm Tribe of Yemen: A Window into Arabia's Past." Aston did his home work and presented his findings in that Journal to overcome the "It has to be peer reviewed" meme.

The Journal of Arabian Studies is hosted by Georgetown University, Qatar and participates in the  of Taylor and Francis Online Open Select program. (Thanks to Neal Rappleye for pointing this out.) Once can access the Journal home page at  http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjab20/current and will see the Taylor and Francis logo image.png.6278a1d4972ad3106572d1891dacdc9a.pngand "Taylor and Francis" to the right of the logo.

Open Select journals

Open Select ensures researchers can publish open access (OA) in over 2,300 Taylor & Francis and Routledge journals, ranging across the sciences, social sciences, medicine, technology, engineering, humanities and arts. These hybrid journals publish both OA content and content available via subscription.

Open Select means you can:

Choose from established journals, offering well-defined aims and scope and an expert editorial board.
Select OA after your article has been rigorously peer-reviewed and accepted by the journal editor.
Ensure your research can be read by anyone, anywhere immediately upon publication.
Reach a wide audience through the global dissemination of your research on Taylor & Francis Online and via our marketing and sales channels.
Benefit from article metrics to help you in assessing the impact of your work.

The above should be all that is needed. I am not going to debate it.

Edited to add: Aston uses non-LDS sources to make his case for the Nihm tribe existing by at least the 8th century BCE. The references are there for anyone to read and come to their own conclusions.

Glenn

Edited by Glenn101
Posted (edited)

Thanks Glenn, but we already discussed Aston's paper. In his paper Aston points out his work is just "reconstructed and theoretical history", but hasn't been disputed yet, and "the possible earlier link of the name to the large-scale construction of burial tombs in the Neolithic era remains conjectural." " 

I forgot to add in this thread my original request. "just one non-Mormon scholar that confirms with evidence that Nihm dates to at least 600 BC"  

But at least your reference is much better than MDalby's link because it talks about the Nihm tribe. 

Edited by SamuelTheLamanite
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...