Ohio University students gain hands-on experience at the Shoop Paleo-Indian site in Pennsylvania. The field school teaches ...
Hosted on MSN
UofA study confirms earliest evidence of humans
TUCSON, AZ (AZFamily) — A new study by the University of Arizona shows human life in North America may have developed much earlier than we thought. Researchers first found a set of human footprints at ...
Opinion
History With Kayleigh Official on MSNOpinion
130,000-Year Controversy: Did Humans Reach North America Early?
At the Cerutti Mastodon site in California, researchers found broken mastodon bones and stone cobbles dated to 130,000 years ago—suggesting human activity far earlier than accepted timelines. Critics ...
Live Science on MSN
Who discovered America?
The first people to arrive in the Western Hemisphere were Indigenous Americans, who were descended from an ancestral group of ...
New Mexico’s most famous fossilized footprints are every bit as old as they seem, according to a new University of Arizona study that bolsters the case for the earliest evidence of humans ever found ...
What did early humans like to eat? The answer, according to a team of archaeologists in Argentina, is extinct megafauna, such ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results