News

Archeologists say Windover Pond in Titusville is the site of one of the most significant archaeological finds ever made in North America.
Madeleine McLeester spoke with The Dartmouth about her field work, its implications for sustainability and the importance of collaborative archaeology.
Dr. Spencer Pelton and his colleagues have conducted a comprehensive analysis of the River Bend site (48NA202), Wyoming. The ...
Archaeologists have discovered ancient bones which may offer an insight into life during the Aztec era. Peculiar details ...
A new archaeological study suggests humans may have set foot in North America 100,000 years earlier than researchers previously thought.
It evolved in South America around 35 million years ago and eventually pushed its way towards North America eight million years ago, adopting the great rivers and lakes as its natural habitat.
Between A.D. 1 and 400, Ohio was the center of the ancient American Indian Hopewell culture. One of its hallmarks was a network of cultural exchange and interaction that spanned eastern North ...
News Published: 19 August 1933 North American Archæology Nature 132, 274 (1933) Cite this article ...
(June 22, 2011)--There are still a few openings in the weeklong Summer Archaeology Camps running through Aug. 12 on the UTSA Main Campus. Presented by the UTSA Center for Archaeological Research, the ...
In May, 20 students enrolled in an archaeology field school at Missouri State discovered the foundation of the William ...
The Poverty Point earthworks could be confused for an Ohio Hopewell site, except for two facts: It is located in Louisiana, and it's more than 1,000 years older than any Hopewell mound.