The discovery could rewrite our understanding of North American human dispersion and and provide some insight into famed Clovis culture.
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists just uncovered the oldest tools ever found in North America
Archaeologists working in Alaska’s middle Tanana Valley have recovered stone and ivory tools from a sealed stratigraphic layer dating to roughly 14,000 years ago, making them among the oldest worked ...
IFLScience on MSN
14,000-year-old mammoth ivory tools in Alaska may have been made by ancestors of the Clovis people
The events that led to the peopling of the Americas remain shrouded in uncertainty, but researchers say that a hunter-gatherer hotspot in central Alaska may provide some clarity. Known as the Holzman ...
Migration into the Americas is not about a single “path,” but timing can still rule routes in or out. The Holzman evidence supports the idea of a southward movement of ancestral Clovis-era populations ...
This collection comprises the field and administrative records of the Thunderbird site near Front Royal in Warren Country, Virginia. The collection accompanies approximately 50,000 Paleolithic Clovis ...
"Peopling of the Americas publications." "This is the story of the Hogeye cache and its remarkable collection of Clovis artifacts - a time capsule from the past. A circuitous path brought thirteen of ...
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