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.
A groundbreaking discovery is changing everything we know about North American history! In this video, we explore the ...
Stacker used Census data and other sources to explore the history of Black Wall Streets and their legacy in present-day Black ...
From the site of Durham’s Black Wall Street, where Black-owned businesses thrived, to the site of the state’s oldest surviving African Church, built more than 160 years ago, there’s no shortage of ...
OnePlus pushed the envelope on foldables in ways Samsung and Google simply couldn't. Let's hope the Open 2 isn't dead forever ...
New discoveries are breaking old assumptions about Viking women, rewriting history by restoring them to their rightful place ...
The settlement provides evidence of organized communities in central Canada much earlier than previously believed, according ...
Archaeologists have uncovered “conclusive physical evidence” of the first church site, circa 1610, in Hampton in what is the oldest continuous English-speaking parish in North America.
For a long time, researchers have sought to estimate the size of North America’s Indigenous population before European colonization to fully understand its impact.
What are we learning about the past? Here are three of our most recent eye-catching archaeology stories.