From the air it looks like a sea of green...
It’s been dubbed the Adena pipe and is now the official state artifact of Ohio, as soon as Gov. John Kasich signs off on it, which a spokesman says he will...
Suspicions of cannibalism at the Jamestown Settlement have been around for a long time...
Lee Allen
March 27, 2013
The Pima Indian word for the Hohokam peoples translates to “all used up” or “the finished ones,” but archaeologists digging in Arizona’s University Indian Ridge Ruins continue to f...
Lee Allen
March 11, 2013
The first person to walk here did so over a thousand years ago when the Hohokam arrived at what is now known as Colossal Cave Mountain Park in Vail, Arizona...
Jude Isabella, thetyee.ca
February 17, 2013
[Editor’s Note: Often passed, seldom visited by outsiders, British Columbia’s Central Coast is home to the continent’s longest-settled places and most enduring peoples...
The Montauk Indian Museum Committee is hosting its first Archaeology Fest, to be held Saturday, October 13, 2012, on the grounds of the Montauk Historical Society's Second House Mu...
This year’s Archaeology in the Watershed canoe and kayak tour will feature the Town River, the headwater for the Taunton River in Bridgewater and West Bridgewater in Massachusetts...
Dennis Griffin, with Oregon’s State Historic Preservation Office, has been combing the hillsides of Alaskan tundra looking for signs of life. He’s been exploring Hall and St...
Two recently published studies delve into what caused the collapse of the Mayan empire, a question many archaeologists have tried answering...

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