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Can you tell your burin from your awl, your bladelet from your harpoon? In this interactive, try to identify 10 tools made by hunters who lived between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago.
Researchers at Kent State University have published an analysis of what could be the largest discovery of Ice Age weaponry in North America.. The collection of 165 stone tools was discovered on a ...
The analysis showed there were humans in North America before, during and immediately after the peak of the last Ice Age. However, it was not until much later that populations expanded ...
Dating back to about 13,000 years ago, the “Clovis culture” was long thought to be the earliest humans in North America. Now archaeologists have uncovered stone tools in Texas that could be as ...
Stone tools found in a Mexican cave suggest that people were living in North America as early as about 26,500 years ago, much earlier than most scientists accept, a new study says.
People may have lived in North America by 30,000 years ago Stone tools from a cave in Mexico date from before the Last Glacial Maximum. Kiona N. Smith – Jul 23, 2020 2:39 pm | 99 ...
That upends the idea that the first people arrived in North America between 18,000 and 13,000 years ago after continent-hopping from modern-day Siberia via the Bering land bridge.
Crude choppers, scrapers estimated to be between 13,000 and 15,000 years found near town of Walker; area known to have been glacier-free 'oasis' during last Ice Age.
Find the complete program transcript, including credits for the NOVA program America's Stone Age Explorers, originally broadcast on PBS on November 9, 2004.
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