News

While you may know the best trails of the Grand Canyon's North Rim or perhaps some of the most dangerous hikes in the Grand Canyon National Parks, the park is also home to numerous archaeological ...
OZARKS, ARKANSAS—According to a statement released by the University of York, researchers have retraced the genetic origins of hardy and cold-resistant types of maize, or corn, in eastern North ...
Archaeologists working at the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter in Oregon recently found evidence that it could be the oldest human ...
Historic Pensacola, sure. But historic Molino? UWF archaeology students are researching site of 18th century native mission.
The discovery of a mysterious culture're path through the White Sands National Park pushes the understanding of North American human history back by 10,000 years ...
In what is now the desert of White Sands, New Mexico, a trail of human footprints crosses the hardened bed of an extinct lake ...
Especially is this evident when, as in a guide to exhibits illustrating the archaeology of North America recently issued by the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, ...
A 2010 paper published in the journal American Antiquity estimated the Indigenous population of eastern North America around 1500 to be somewhere between 500,000 and 2.6 million people.
Researchers determined that footprints in White Sands National Park in New Mexico are from the oldest migrants to North ...
A major archaeological discovery near the community of Sturgeon Lake First Nation, in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, is revolutionizing the understanding of the earliest Indigenous ...
Ancestral Menominee people in what’s now Michigan’s Upper Peninsula grew maize and other crops on large tracts of land despite harsh conditions.
Carbon dating of the charcoal showed that the ridges were rebuilt over a 600-year span, beginning around A.D. 1000 during what is known as the Late Woodland period in North America.