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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 ...
Archaeologists uncover 13,700-year-old mammoth ivory rods in Alaska, linking early carving traditions to Clovis culture ...
Patrick O. Stone explores the evolving landscape of fire station design by sharing insights from his peers with varying ...
Researchers uncovered a large Second Temple–period stone vessel workshop on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem after a looting probe.
An ancient quarry site in Newton County offers evidence that humans removed chert for stone tools, spear points and arrow points from bedrock centuries earlier than archaeologists ...
Expanding Beyond Stone Veneer to Deliver Integrated Installation Solutions That Enhance Performance, Protection, and ...
Building the human story based on a few artefacts is tricky – particularly for wooden tools that don’t preserve well, or cave ...
Starch trapped in ancient tools points to long-term cultivation of the Four Corners potato by Indigenous people of the ...
Archaeologists at Drouseia-Skloinikia on the Akamas peninsula have unearthed a treasure trove of stone tools, beads, shells and bones, some dating back 8,000 years, offering a rare glimpse into the ...
The finding, along with the discovery of a 500,000-year-old hammer made of bone, indicates that our human ancestors were making tools even earlier than archaeologists thought. By Franz Lidz Early ...
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