Learn about the fascinating Clovis culture and their relationship with woolly mammoths. New research sheds light on their ...
When Earth was frozen over during the Pleistocene epoch, early humans crossed the Bering Strait from the Asian continent to ...
This discovery sheds new light on the survival strategies of ancient humans and their impact on the environment.
Scientists have unearthed direct evidence suggesting that the first humans in North America hunted mammoths as a dietary staple, reshaping our understanding of ancient survival strategies. The ...
Early Americans relied on mammoths for survival, using their meat for food and hides for clothing. But this reliance may have ...
ScientiFix, our weekly feature, offers you a summary of the top global science stories of the week, with links to their sources.
Clovis people relied heavily on mammoths, using advanced hunting skills for food and expansion. Mammoths formed 40% of their ...
This week, uncover the challenges faced by Voyager 1, meet flower-licking wolves, see an unexpected ancient lifesaving tool, ...
An artist’s reconstruction of Clovis life 13,000 years ago shows the Anzick-1 infant with his mother consuming mammoth meat near a hearth. Another individual crafts tools, including dart projectile ...
The remains of the ancient 18-month-old male child, who was the subject of the study, was accidentally unearthed near Wilsall in 1968.
Ancient ancestors of Native Americans, known as the Clovis people, mostly ate mammoths and other large animals during the ...
Research archeologist Juliet Morrow studied tools found at a gravesite that dates to about 13,000 years ago. Isotope analysis confirmed that mammoth was an important food source in Ice Age America.