IFLScience on MSN
14,000-year-old mammoth ivory tools in Alaska may have been made by ancestors of the Clovis people
The events that led to the peopling of the Americas remain shrouded in uncertainty, but researchers say that a hunter-gatherer hotspot in central Alaska may provide some clarity. Known as the Holzman ...
Discoveries at a controversial southeastern archaeological site could potentially push back the timelines for human arrival ...
Clovis point preform recovered from the Genevieve Lykes Duncan dig site. (Courtesy Photo) ALPINE The Center for Big Bend Studies at Sul Ross State University is seeking volunteers to help uncover a ...
The earliest humans to settle the Great Lakes region likely returned to a campsite in southwest Michigan for several years in a row, according to a University of Michigan study. Until recently, there ...
A spot along the San Pedro River where the earliest known humans in the New World butchered bison and mammoths has been named one of the "five great places to see evidence of first Americans" by ...
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