The Daily Galaxy on MSN
First Americans may have come from Japan, not Siberia and it’s flipping the human migration story upside down
The story of how humans first entered the Americas is among archaeology’s most persistent puzzles. For much of the 20th ...
Islands.com on MSN
Skip Peru's Crowded Inca Trail To Machu Picchu For This Wildly Under-The-Radar Ancient Route
Machu Picchu will always be a bucket-list destination, but its popularity comes with drawbacks. Consider this alternative ...
ExplorersWeb on MSN
From Tricouni Nails to Crampons: The Evolution of Mountaineering Spikes
Two key innovations, the Tricouni nails and the modern crampons, emerged as ways to add grip on slippery ground. Each had its ...
Discover a secondhand paradise in Maine where treasure hunters can spend hours exploring aisles filled with unexpected finds, ...
The Driftless Area Scenic Byway cuts a mesmerizing 144-mile path through a region that ancient glaciers mysteriously bypassed ...
Researchers identified chemical traces of poison on 60,000-year-old arrowheads, meaning the artifacts bear the oldest known evidence of arrow poison.
After a century of searching, a chance discovery led archaeologists to one of the most important sanctuaries in the ancient Greek world Archaeologists first explored Eretria in the late nineteenth ...
Once dismissed as sticks and forgotten in a museum, the 5,000-year-old tools show prehistoric people hunted whales far from ...
Scientists examining traces left behind by early humans continue to find evidence that refuses to stay neatly in place. New ...
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