
Anthropology
A team of international researchers has found that modern-day humans entered North America as part of a single migration wave no earlier than 23,000 years ago.
Ice-Age Hunters Were In North America Earlier Than Believed
Mar 23, 2015 • 2 min. readNew research shows that prehistoric Ice-Age people hunted horse and camel 13,300 years ago in North America, much earlier than previously believed.
The discovery of the ‘Kennewick Man’ has changed how scientists look at early man.
Boy’s Skeleton In Siberia Raises New Questions About First Americans
Nov 20, 2013 • 3 min. readResults from a DNA study of a young boy’s skeletal remains believed to be 24,000 years old could turn the archaeological world upside down.
The discovery of fluted spear points in northwest Alaska strongly suggests that peopling of the Americas was more complex than previously believed.
Last Of Four Brothers – Twins Lance And Lawrn – Set To Graduate Friday
Aug 14, 2013 • 5 min. readWhen their twins, Lance and Lawrn, graduate from Texas A&M University Friday they will be the proud parents of four Aggie grads.
One thing Texas A&M University anthropology professor Mike Waters has learned through the years is this: if you have a good story to tell, the world will want to hear about it.
Camp Hearne was among the largest, housing almost 5,000 POWS in its brief tenure.
Skeletal remains found in a South African cave may yield new clues to human development and answer key questions of the evolution of the human lineage.
Vaughn Bryant spends hours at a time peering at slides of pollen samples, comparing them to track down the origins of honey with questionable heritage.