Ancient Bone Needles Reveal Ice Age Survival Tactics in Wyoming

TL;DR Summary
Archaeologists in Wyoming have discovered 32 bone needle fragments at the La Prele site, revealing that ancient Americans used tools made from the bones of small carnivores like red foxes and extinct American cheetahs to survive the Ice Age. This finding, published in PLOS ONE, challenges previous assumptions that such tools were made from larger animals like bison or mammoths. The site, associated with the Clovis culture, provides insights into the lives of some of North America's earliest inhabitants.
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- 13,000-Year-Old Animal Bone Needles Unearthed At Mammoth Hunting Base In Wyoming IFLScience
- 13,000 years ago, North Americans used cheetah, lion bones to sew furs against the blistering cold The Jerusalem Post
- 13,000-year-old bone needles found in Wyoming were used to make clothing Interesting Engineering
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