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      These are the oldest stone tools ever found in the United States

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 10 July, 2023 - 17:25

    photo of a low rock cliff with black netting stretching from its top down to scrub desert landscape below, with archaeologists working beneath the netting in the shade

    Enlarge / Rimrock Draw Rockshelter has been excavated since 2011. (credit: Bureau of Land Management)

    Stone tools unearthed from a rock shelter in Southern Oregon were last used more than 18,000 years ago, radiocarbon dating suggests. That makes the site one of the oldest-known human living spaces in the Americas. But the people who lived in Oregon more than 18,000 years ago almost certainly weren’t the first to call the continent home.

    A home where the buffalo roam

    Buried deep beneath a layer of volcanic ash, archaeologists excavating Rimrock Draw Rockshelter found two stone scraping tools, which ancient knappers had skillfully shaped from pieces of orange agate. A residue of dried bison blood still clung to the edges of one scraper, a remnant of the last bit of work some ancient person had done with the tool before discarding it. The layer of volcanic ash above the tools had blasted out of Mount St. Helens, a few hundred kilometers north of the rock shelter, 15,000 years ago, long after the fine agate scrapers, and the people who made and used them, had been forgotten.

    But how long?

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      Space archaeologists are charting humanity’s furthest frontier

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Sunday, 2 April, 2023 - 10:15

    Astronaut Kayla Barron snaps photos inside an ISS module.

    Enlarge / Astronaut Kayla Barron snaps photos inside an ISS module. (credit: NASA)

    Archaeologists have probed the cultures of people all over the Earth—so why not study a unique community that’s out of this world? One team is creating a first-of-its-kind archaeological record of life aboard the International Space Station .

    The new project, called the Sampling Quadrangle Assemblages Research Experiment, or SQuARE, involves hundreds of photos taken by astronauts throughout the living and work spaces of the ISS. People have continuously occupied the space station for decades, and the launch of its initial modules in the late 1990s coincided with the rise of digital photography. That meant that astronauts were no longer limited by film canisters when documenting life in space, and that space archaeologists —yes, that’s a thing—no longer had to merely speculate about it from afar.

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