The find suggests early North Americans had sophisticated transport methods, helping them migrate across vast landscapes with their belongings thousands of years ago. Since wood rots, no ancient ...
Credit: Gabriel Ugueto/Bournemouth University The earliest known North Americans used wooden "vehicles" to transport goods, and possibly even people, more than 20,000 years ago, a new study suggests.
A year after the Tasmania Devils unveiled their name and colours, AFL CEO Andrew Dillon looks back at a huge 12 months for ...
ANCIENT marks from the world’s “first ever vehicle” which ... how prehistoric humans used to move heavy objects over 20,000 years ago. The fossilised marks were either two parallel lines ...
Forty years ago this week, on March 22, 1985, Arkansas played its first home baseball game at night at the old George Cole ...
Deep below Earth’s surface, rock and mineral formations lay hidden with a secret brilliance. Under a black light, the ...
Anyone who has ever wondered what their neck of the woods looked like when even extinct species like dinosaurs roamed the Earth can get a peek with this map.
Donald Trump’s neocolonial foreign policy could invite a surprise Chinese attack on an underprepared American island in the ...
On Feb. 14, a drone with a high-explosive warhead that likely cost as little as $20,000 to produce punched ... built around the reactor almost 40 years ago, which still sits within the shell ...
The administration’s research funding and DEI cuts present an existential threat to regional public universities like ...
The Trump administration has sought to deport Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil for leading the pro-Palestinian ...