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University of Alaska

An artist’s depiction of Clovis life 13,000 years ago shows the Anzick-1 infant with his mother eating mammoth meat by a hearth, while another person crafts tools like dart points and atlatls. Nearby, a mammoth butchery area is visible. The scene, inspired by the La Prele mammoth site in Wyoming, is set in the Montana landscape where the Anzick burial was found.

Ancient Americans Relied Heavily on Mammoth Hunting, Isotope Study Shows

Categories Life & Non-humans, Social Sciences
The Mirror Lake offramp on the Glenn Highway near Chugiak, Alaska, shows damage after the Nov. 30, 2018, earthquake. Photo courtesy of Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities

New Algorithm Detects Early Signs of Major Earthquakes Months in Advance

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Physics & Mathematics
Part of the Nanushk formation

Alaska dinosaur tracks reveal a lush, wet environment

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Life & Non-humans
The Coliseum site is viewed from above. The once-horizontal rocks are now nearly vertical, exposing many hundreds of tracks on flatirons of resistant rock. The dimples on the rock faces are dinosaur tracks.

Scientists explore dinosaur ‘coliseum’ in Denali National Park

Categories Life & Non-humans
Seaweed

Seaweed farms could help clean marine pollution

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment
the Moon

Earth’s atmosphere may be source of some lunar water

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Space
Image by James Havens An adult male woolly mammoth navigates a mountain pass in Arctic Alaska 17,100 years ago. The image is produced from an original life-size painting by paleo artist James Havens. The painting is housed at the University of Alaska Museum of the North in Fairbanks.

An unprecedented peek into life of 17,000-year-old mammoth

Categories Life & Non-humans

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