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Study questions evidence at key Chile site tied to early Americans
A new study published in the journal Science argues that Monte Verde, an archaeological site in southern Chile long ...
The Monte Verde archaeological site in Chile, discovered in the 1970s, revolutionized the thinking about when humans entered the Americas, with scientists calculating decades ago that this former ...
For decades, the strongest evidence for the earliest human settlement in the Americas came from a site in Chile called Monte Verde. Scientists found echoes of human presence dating back to around ...
By collecting bark from a dead birch tree (left) and processing it in a fire pit (center), Oxford’s Tjaark Siemssen prepared ...
Researchers revisited the 1970s discovery of ancient stone tools at Monte Verde—an iconic site in Chile that transformed our understanding of how and when humans arrived in the Americas.
Gary Todd / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain Archaeologists have uncovered evidence of a 13,500-year-old human settlement in Saudi Arabia, revealing that ancient communities lived in the deserts of ...
Saudi Arabia's Heritage Commission reveals archaeological evidence of a 13,500-year-old human settlement in northern Arabia ...
New findings suggest humans mastered fire far earlier than believed, transforming diets, social life, and survival in ancient ...
Haragopal warned that increasing real estate activity is threatening historical sites around the city and urged the heritage ...
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