Roughly 22,000 years ago, humans pulled a primitive vehicle across the sand in present-day New Mexico, likely to transport ...
Footprints of adults and children alongside drag marks indicate Ice Age families used travois to transport goods.
In New Mexico, archaeologists identified 20,000-year-old human footprints and drag marks that they believe were left by a ...
The linear tracks and human footprints found may be evidence of ancient transportation technology.
Apparent 23,000-year-old tracks may have been left by Paleoindians pulling wooden vehicles carrying resources—and possibly ...
Indigenous people consulted in the research suggested that the marks were left by some kind of travois, a wooden frame made ...
These marks found with footprints could be from 22,000-year-old primitive sleds, making them the oldest vehicle tracks.
Scientists have discovered footprints and drag marks left behind by an ancient vehicle dated to over 22,000 years ago.
ANCIENT marks from the world’s “first ever vehicle” which pre-dates the invention of the wheel have been found in a ...
Marks resembling sled tracks at White Sands suggest that ancient Americans used travois-like structures for transport.
Drawn by people, dogs or, later, horses, travois were a mainstay of traditional Native American life in the West. Up through ...
Ancient Native Americans probably used makeshift “transport technology” to drag their possessions from place to place more than 20,000 years ago, a new study finds — and the evidence of the ...