Tupananchiskama: Ancient Andean Cosmovision When: From March 19 until Jan. 3, 2027 Where: Museum of Anthropology at UBC Info: ...
A visitor views ancient Andean artifacts during a preview event for the exhibition "Tupananchiskama: Ancient Andean Cosmovision" at the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, ...
The $3,500 prize, given by UBC Library and the Pacific BookWorld News Society, is awarded annually to the outstanding ...
This year, the US parties hard with a big birthday, while the wild jungles that lie to its south lure new eyes. Boasting some of the largest remaining wilderness areas in the world, North and Central ...
The Museum of Anthropology was lit up and alive on March 12 with bold colours, textiles and the ambient sounds of runway ...
In A Nutshell Researchers dated 136 preserved organic weapons from western North America and found the bow and arrow appeared ...
New York has been missing one of its most consequential institutions of contemporary art for two years now, ever since the ...
More than a century ago, the massive mammals actually grazed beside the Smithsonian Castle. As of today, two large sculptures continue that legacy as they flank the museum’s main entrance ...
A four-person team has shaped the Encounters section of Art Basel Hong Kong, organizing it around the elements of water, fire, earth and ether.
Researchers revisited the 1970s discovery of ancient stone tools at Monte Verde—an iconic site in Chile that transformed our understanding of how and when humans arrived in the Americas.
New research led by a University of Wyoming archaeologist near an ancient encampment in South America challenges a relatively new but widely accepted theory that the people who made and used Clovis ...
A new study questions the age of Chile's Monte Verde archaeological site, reigniting debate over when the first people reached South America.