Even our early human ancestors couldn’t resist the crystal-blue waters of the Great Lakes. A new study found that the Great ...
The earliest humans to settle the Great Lakes region likely returned to a campsite in southwest Michigan for several years in ...
The rolling green fields surrounding an Episcopal church in Maryland conceal a secret: Native Americans made weapons here ...
That spear is useless now ... the people who hunted with them, are known as Clovis people. The discovery at Clovis was one of the most dramatic leaps forward in our understanding of the history ...
The Clovis people may have used a series of pikes tipped with these sharp points planted in the ground to impale a charging animal. The force of the running mammoth would have driven the spear ...
The Clovis people who lived in North America roughly ... which suggests they may have been attached to spear shafts. The first Clovis points ever discovered were found mixed in with mammoth ...
The people had a limited number of suitable ... Their low-tech, static version of an animal attack using a braced, replica Clovis point spear allowed them to test how different spears reached ...
That spear is useless now ... the people who hunted with them, are known as Clovis people. The discovery at Clovis was one of the most dramatic leaps forward in our understanding of the history ...
The earliest humans to settle the Great Lakes region likely returned to a campsite in southwest Michigan for several years in a row, according to a new study.