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How did humans first reach the Americas?
Live Science via Yahoo News· 1 year agoBeautiful sunrise sky over frozen water lake Baikal Siberia Ice age humans crossing over the Bering Land Bridge likely experienced icy conditions like...
Ancient spear tip stuck in mastodon’s rib is oldest bone weapon in America, study says
Miami Herald via AOL· 1 year agoA hunter missed the mark almost 14,000 years ago, but their bad luck left a valuable discovery stuck...
Caprock Chronicles: Footprints in the Sand: Was Clovis Man the first American?
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal via Yahoo News· 1 year agoFor almost a century, artifacts found near Clovis, New Mexico, were accepted by scientists as...
The search for the very first Ohioans continues | Archaeology
The Columbus Dispatch via Yahoo News· 1 year agoThe most important unanswered question in Ohio archaeology may be “When did people first set foot in...
'Close to the crisis stage'
Eastern New Mexico News, Clovis, N.M. via Yahoo News· 1 year agoFeb. 21—There are homeless people in Clovis. "People just turn a blind eye to it," Cherry Gooch said. Gooch has founded "4 All of Us Transitional Improvement Inc.," a service to help the homeless ...
The new research changing what we know about the first Americans
The Week via Yahoo News· 8 months agoFossilised human footprints at White Sands National Park in New Mexico. New research suggests the...
Do the ancient human footprints at White Sands date back to the last ice age?
Popular Science via Yahoo News· 9 months agoThe oldest human footprints found in White Sands National Park were initially excavated in 2009. In...
Want to see 2 million years of life? Visit the Lubbock Lake Landmark archaeological dig
Austin American-Statesman via Yahoo News· 11 months agoLUBBOCK — One tourist site in this West Texas city is like no other. The Lubbock Lake Landmark,...
Debate settled? Oldest human footprints in North America really are 23,000 years old, study finds
Live Science via Yahoo News· 9 months agoFossilized human footprints in beige and white sand at White Sands in New, Mexico. Paleo-human...
Whether it came from king or kin, Clovis loans its name to major archaeological discovery
Albuquerque Journal, N.M. via Yahoo News· 1 year agoMar. 5—Editor's note: The Journal continues "What's in a Name?," a once a month column in which writer Elaine Briseño will give a short history of how places in New Mexico got their names. Modern-day ...