An 11,000-year-old Indigenous settlement found in Saskatchewan reshapes the understanding of North American civilizations.
The discovery of an 11,000-year-old village in Saskatchewan could rewrite Indigenous history in central Canada.
The U.S. is full of archaeological sites, "but in most cases you could be standing right on top of one and never know it," Elic Weitzel told Newsweek.
Around 50,000 years ago, North America was home to a diverse array of megafauna. Mammoths roamed the tundra, while towering ...
Archaeologists have uncovered “conclusive physical evidence” of the first church site, circa 1610, in Hampton in what is the ...
Exciting discoveries from archaeological sites predating the Clovis culture pose new questions about how, when, and by whom ...
The settlement provides evidence of organized communities in central Canada much earlier than previously believed, according ...
A major archaeological discovery near the community of Sturgeon Lake First Nation, in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, ...
For a long time, researchers have sought to estimate the size of North America’s Indigenous population before European ...
The fate of the settlers who founded the "Lost Colony of Roanoke" in what is now North Carolina remains unknown.
Horses first evolved in North America. Some of their early ancestors lived 30 ... NSF research on the introduction of horses into the Great Plains, and the ways that archaeology and Indigenous ...