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Archaeologists used to think that the Clovis people were the first inhabitants of the Americas some 13,500 years ago. The ...
The wily prehistoric hunters long considered the first people of the Americas were almost certainly latecomers to the continent, researchers have concluded. For 80 years, scholars were convinced ...
Archaeologists have uncovered a 13,000-year-old campsite in the Great Lakes region, shedding light on the mysterious and nomadic lives of the Clovis people. The discovery of tools, spearheads, and ...
The belief that the Clovis People were the first to populate North America some 11,500 years ago has been widely challenged in recent years, and a Texas A&M University anthropologist has found ...
The belief that the Clovis People were the first to populate North America some 11,500 years ago has been widely challenged in recent years, and a Texas A&M University anthropologist has found ...
The belief that the Clovis People were the first to populate North America some 11,500 years ago has been widely challenged in recent years, and a Texas A&M University anthropologist has found ...
The Clovis people were apparently not the only group living in North America 12,000 years ago. The immediate question was, how were the two groups related? Paisley Caves An answer was not long in ...
Clovis people not 1st to arrive in North America. Kazi Stastna | CBC News | Posted: July 13, 2012 12:18 AM | Last Updated: July 13, 2012. Spearheads, DNA found in Oregon's Paisley Caves suggest ...
Fossilized human poop — some 14,000 years old — found in Oregon caves is evidence of the first people in North America, according to an analysis published in the journal Science this week. The ...
NARRATOR: Even faced with evidence to the contrary, Clovis First supporters refused to accept that people could have arrived in America earlier than 13,500 years ago.
At the moment, most archaeologists accept the idea that people started moving into North America sometime between 20,000 and 16,000 years ago. Those dates come from sites like Cooper’s Ferry in ...
A new study provides the strongest evidence yet of a North American civilization older than the famed Clovis people, based on stone tools that appear to date back 15,500 years.
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