A research team has demonstrated that Norse society did not die out due to an inability to adapt to the Greenlandic diet as isotopic analysis of their bones shows they ate plenty of seals...
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Scooped by David Connolly onto Archaeology News |
A research team has demonstrated that Norse society did not die out due to an inability to adapt to the Greenlandic diet as isotopic analysis of their bones shows they ate plenty of seals...
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The Poverty Point earthworks could be confused for an Ohio Hopewell site, except for two facts: It is located in Louisiana, and it’s more than 1,000 years older than any Hopewell mound.
One of the biggest puzzles in North American archaeology is how the relatively small bands of hunter-gatherers living at that time could have built monumental architecture on this scale without food surpluses provided by farming or the centralized leadership of a king or chief.
One theory is that many small groups of hunter-gatherers came together on a seasonal basis year after year for generations to slowly construct this complex of parallel embankments and mounds.
However, the results of new excavations into the largest of Poverty Point’s mounds refute this theory. Delete the scoop?
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WHISKEY SPRINGS • Eighty years ago, Mike built a cabin. Delete the scoop?
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