During the Ice Age, much of the planet was locked in extreme cold. Early humans faced freezing temperatures, scarce resources, and dangerous predators. Survival depended on fire, animal hides, ...
Archaeologists have identified the oldest known example of sewn hide, a small fragment of elk hide meticulously stitched with twisted fiber, dating back approximately 12,400 years. Found within Cougar ...
Deep inside the dry caves of Oregon, archaeologists have uncovered something remarkable. Pieces of animal hide stitched together. Using plant fibers a.
The creation of this article included the use of AI and was edited by human content creators. Read more on our AI policy here. What did the earliest Americans wear to survive brutal Ice Age winters?
Finds at Alaska’s Holzman site show how Ice Age hunters, mammoths, and tools shaped the earliest journey into North America.
Along Turkey’s northwestern shoreline, where the Aegean Sea meets the olive-covered ridges of Anatolia, lies a quiet district called Ayvalık. Now it’s famous for its sun-kissed islands and seafront ...
Footprints found in White Sands, New Mexico, are challenging everything we thought we knew about the first humans in North ...