Archaeologists used to think that the Clovis people were the first inhabitants of the Americas some 13,500 years ago. The ...
What are we learning about the past? Here are three of our most recent eye-catching archaeology stories.
These goggles, crafted by the Thule people who lived in Alaska and northern Canada around 800 to 1600, are a very early ...
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Secret cache discovered in AlaskaA 1,000-year-old food cache has been discovered in Alaska, a site that once allowed Indigenous populations to store their food for future use.
Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The refuge, which runs a unit near the Scott County Fairgrounds in St. Lawrence Township, was established to ...
The discovery of an 11,000-year-old village in Saskatchewan could rewrite Indigenous history in central Canada.
Air Force engineers and archaeologists in Alaska have discovered a food cache on the Upper Cook Inlet southwest of Anchorage ...
The bones belonged to dozens of hunted species, the institute said, including woolly mammoths. The skeletons of at least 13 ...
Shutterstock Extraordinary is a regular Tuesday here. Utqiagvik in Alaska is America’s North Pole. We’re talking midnight sun ...
Recent proposals suggest growing trees in Arctic regions to store carbon and slow rising temperatures. However, new findings ...
Rinella will uncover stories of lost ships, vanished pioneers, ancient civilizations, unexplained phenomena, and more.
An ancient culture that lived on the coast of Ecuador buried a young, pregnant woman 1,200 years ago, possibly as a sacrifice, researchers say. Jude Wilson via Unsplash On the ancient shores of ...
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