New research challenges a key archaeological site in Chile, raising fresh questions about when humans first arrived in the ...
The unearthing of finely worked mammoth ivory tools in Alaska has pushed archaeologists to rethink when and how humans first spread into North America. The artifacts, linked to the iconic Clovis ...
The bow and arrow only arrived in western North America 1,400 years ago, according to a recent dating of over a hundred ancient weapons. This is surprising given this technology was widespread in the ...
New research led by a University of Wyoming archaeologist near an ancient encampment in South America challenges a relatively new but widely accepted theory that the people who made and used Clovis ...
A new study led by Todd Surovell, an archaeologist at the University of Wyoming, together with a team of collaborators from Chile, Austria, and the United States Geological Survey, has called into ...
Humans arrived in North America 2,500 years earlier than previously believed, exploding an 80-year-old assumption about who settled the continent. The Clovis people, known for their distinctive spear ...
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