Archaeological evidence shows that human activity in North America dates back roughly 13,000 years, with spots like the ...
In the bitter cold of Ice Age Montana some 13,000 years ago, a grieving band of early Americans buried a young child with ...
New research examines chemical signatures to determine the diet of a prehistoric boy and his mother, suggesting the Clovis ...
This discovery sheds new light on the survival strategies of ancient humans and their impact on the environment.
The Clovis people, highly skilled nomadic hunters, used advanced tools like stone spear points to take down massive prey. This strategic focus allowed them to spread rapidly across North and South ...
The remains of the ancient 18-month-old male child, who was the subject of the study, was accidentally unearthed near Wilsall in 1968.
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.
An archeological find in the Shields Valley in 1968 revealed some surprising new information about the earliest inhabitants ...
"Clovis people were highly sophisticated hunters, with skills refined over more than 10,000 years," Chatters added.
These isotopes act as chemical fingerprints, revealing what the child’s mother ate and passed on through breastfeeding.
MISSOULA, Mont. — Scientists released a new academic paper on Wednesday, detailing how they studied the remains of an infant ...
Scientists have found the first direct evidence that ancient Americans relied heavily on mammoths and other large animals for food. This discovery sheds light on how early humans spread across the ...