New evidence has emerged that sheds light on the possible first people to populate the Americas. Dating of stone and ivory ...
Finds at Alaska’s Holzman site show how Ice Age hunters, mammoths, and tools shaped the earliest journey into North America.
Recent discoveries have unveiled a fascinating chapter in human history, as stone tools provide compelling evidence of Paleolithic migrations across the Pacific into North America. This challenges the ...
Discoveries at a controversial southeastern archaeological site could potentially push back the timelines for human arrival ...
New discoveries in the American Southwest suggest humans may have reached North America far earlier than previously accepted. Butchered mammoth bones, bone tools, and signs of controlled fire indicate ...
David Bustos heard about the “ghost tracks” when he first went to White Sands National Park in New Mexico to work as a wildlife scientist in 2005. When the ground was wet enough at certain times of ...
Studying preserved footprints in New Mexico continues to provide insight into the first human movements in North America. A research team believes the footprints are more than 23,000 years old, ...
Migration into the Americas is not about a single “path,” but timing can still rule routes in or out. The Holzman evidence supports the idea of a southward movement of ancestral Clovis-era populations ...
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