Finds at Alaska’s Holzman site show how Ice Age hunters, mammoths, and tools shaped the earliest journey into North America.
"The site reveals evidence of stone and mammoth ivory tool production, food preparation, and human dispersals dating back to ...
The unearthing of finely worked mammoth ivory tools in Alaska has pushed archaeologists to rethink when and how humans first ...
Migration into the Americas is not about a single “path,” but timing can still rule routes in or out. The Holzman evidence supports the idea of a southward movement of ancestral Clovis-era populations ...
A quiet stretch of Alaska's interior may hold new clues to how people pushed into the Americas roughly 14,000 years ago. In a study in Quaternary International, researchers say stone and ivory tools ...
New evidence has emerged that sheds light on the possible first people to populate the Americas. Dating of stone and ivory ...