A study of a 12,800-year-old skull of a toddler offers a glimpse at how early Americans found food, and how their hunts may ...
The American red wolf was a staple apex predator in North American wildlife until hunting and habitat destruction pushed it ...
Scientists have uncovered the first direct evidence that ancient Americans relied primarily on mammoth and other large animals for food. Their research sheds new light on both the rapid expansion of ...
Scientists have determined that the diet of a Clovis woman who lived in North America 13,000 years ago included a substantial ...
A 31-year-old North American right whale named Nauset has been spotted off the coast of Georgia with a new baby, becoming the ...
Scientists found the first evidence that early Indigenous people in what is now the United States relied primarily on the now ...
Learn more about the giant short-faced bear, and how it would have fared against saber-tooth cats and other Ice Age predators ...
The large fish, armored with bony plates, traveled throughout North American waterways ... was listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act in 1994. Thirty years later, the effort to ...
Scientists from the Duke Lemur Center at Duke University come out to Wyoming every summer to find fossils from the earliest ...
Before European settlers arrived in North America, wolves (Canis Lupus) occupied the entire expanse of the continent from the Arctic to Central America and from the East Coast to the West Coast. It is ...
The first humans who spread across North America during the last Ice Age put mammoths at the top of their menu, according to ...
In a recent breakthrough, archaeologists from the University of Wyoming have unearthed bone needles crafted from the bones of ...