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GB News on MSNArchaeology breakthrough as mystery of America's 'lost colony' finally 'solved' with 400-year-old secret revealedArchaeologists could have finally solved the 435-year mystery of America's first English settlement, known as the "lost ...
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7 Archaeological Sites You Didn't Know Existed In America - MSNToday, Swan Point is northern North Americas oldest site of human occupation and also points to pre-Clovis cultures being present in America. Archaeological investigations still occur ...
Along the Menominee River, on the border between Wisconsin and Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, archaeologists have discovered ...
The thrill of archaeology comes from not knowing what the next shovel of soil will uncover, and over the past few years delighted archaeologists have reported stunning discoveries across North America ...
Researchers were able to date the fossil of the flying reptile, a close cousin of dinosaurs, back to more than 209 million ...
Over 1,200 miles north of the Sunshine State, John O’Shea, an anthropologist and curator at the University of Michigan’s Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, has spent a large part of his ...
Cahokia was the largest pre-Columbian city in North America, and at its peak, the metropolis near modern-day St. Louis was bigger than London.
First English settlers in North America ate dogs, research says. Study provides new insights into social dynamics between colonisers and Indigenous communities in North America ...
The discovery of a 9,000-year-old skeleton in Kennewick, Wash., is sparking a debate about the first inhabitants of North America - and about archaeology itself.
Bob Kelly, professor emeritus of archaeology at UW, excavates a site in Wyoming. Kelly led a new study showing that, if Europeans had arrived in North America a few hundred years earlier, they would ...
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