For many years, archaeologists believed the first human culture in the Americas were the Clovis people, thought to have arrived in Alaska after crossing a land bridge—known as Beringia—from ...
About 13,000 years ago, people from the Clovis period settled in the Great Lakes region and returned to a campsite in southwest Michigan for several consecutive years, according to a new study.
It says that the first Americans were the Clovis people—named for an archeological site located near Clovis, New Mexico—and that they walked across the Bering Land Bridge and spread into what ...
The fragments uncovered were clearly produced by human hands using the distinctive techniques of the Clovis people.
The Clovis were a prehistoric people who flourished in North America at the end of the Ice Age, hunting mammoths and other big game with spear points not unlike this one. To make the point ...
March 10, 2025 – Two well-known figures in the community are celebrating their 104th birthdays this spring. The families of ...
A decade has passed since Clovis conducted a feasibility study for a new bridge spanning Highway 168 near Temperance Avenue, ...
March 15, 2025 — The Clovis community mourns the passing of Judy Hedrick, a woman whose warmth, dedication, and unwavering ...
People like to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day at festive gatherings, but local officers want to make sure people are not ...
And so the makers of these stone points, the people who hunted with them, are known as Clovis people. The discovery at Clovis was one of the most dramatic leaps forward in our understanding of the ...
That’s unclear, but it appears that people may have been settled in other parts of the continent at the same time. Waters says the pre-Clovis artifacts he’s found at Buttermilk Creek—more ...
Clovis West put on a long win streak and hoped to set themselves up with homecourt advantage in the CIF state playoffs. That ...