In a recent breakthrough, archaeologists from the University of Wyoming have unearthed bone needles crafted from the bones of ...
An international team, including the Museum’s Prof Adrian Lister, has sequenced DNA recovered from mammoth remains that are up to 1.2 million years old The analyses show that the Columbian mammoth ...
Nearly 13,000 years ago, long before the Pilgrims arrived, mammoth hunters in North America were crafting eyed bone needles ...
A Wyoming archaeological site where people killed or scavenged a Columbian mammoth nearly 13,000 years ago has produced yet ...
Iola Middle School students learned about a science teacher's discovery of fossilized mammoth remains along the Neosho River.
The bone needles were uncovered at a Wyoming archaeological site that sheds light on some of the early inhabitants of North ...
California-based paleontologists discovered a largely-complete skull of a juvenile Columbian mammoth while working with Metro crews who were excavating the future site of the La Brea subway station on ...
Scientists ultimately determined that the tusk belonged to a young female Columbian mammoth, possibly one that lived during the Lower Paleolithic era, which spanned 2.7 million to 200,000 years ago.
Archaeologists have uncovered fascinating new evidence about how early humans in North America survived cold climates nearly ...
Wyoming archaeologists found 13,000-year-old eyed needles used to make garments at a prehistoric site, in a significant (and ...
Ice Age humans in what is now Wyoming used bones from hares, bobcats, and mountain lions to craft sewing needles, new research suggests.