In the bitter cold of Ice Age Montana some 13,000 years ago, a grieving band of early Americans buried a young child with ...
Clovis people relied heavily on mammoths, using advanced hunting skills for food and expansion. Mammoths formed 40% of their ...
Now, toddler’s bones have revealed shocking dietary preferences of ancient Americans. It turns out these ancient humans dined ...
Ancient ancestors of Native Americans, known as the Clovis people, mostly ate mammoths and other large animals during the ...
"Clovis people were highly sophisticated hunters, with skills refined over more than 10,000 years," Chatters added.
When Earth was frozen over during the Pleistocene epoch, early humans crossed the Bering Strait from the Asian continent to ...
The first humans who spread across North America during the last Ice Age put mammoths at the top of their menu, according to ...
Scientists may have figured out how the earliest known culture in North America spread so rapidly ... confirming the long-debated theory that the Clovis people were devoted megafauna hunters ...
The research team explained that the Clovis people inhabited North America around 13,000 years ago. During that time period, ...
These isotopes act as chemical fingerprints, revealing what the child’s mother ate and passed on through breastfeeding.
Mammoths made up as much as 40 percent of the ancient North Americans’ diet, a chemical analysis of human remains reveals.
Scientists have uncovered the first direct evidence that ancient Americans relied primarily on mammoth and other large ...