enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hudson-Meng Bison Kill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson-Meng_Bison_Kill

    Bill Hudson and Albert Meng were local ranchers who are credited [4] [5] with discovering the bonebed in 1954 while digging for a pond. Originally excavated by Dr. Larry Agenbroad in the 1970s, the dig was over 400 square meters and was considered the largest Alberta Culture bison kill site ever discovered.

  3. Time Team series 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Team_series_7

    Beneath a modern holiday village in Suffolk lies evidence of early Stone Age activity, 400,000 years ago. Human remains from this period in England are exceedingly rare, but the team hope to find animal and plant debris. They will have to dig deep. [8] They are joined by palaeontologists Simon Parfitt and Andy Currant from the Natural History ...

  4. List of archaeological sites in Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_archaeological...

    An example of a multicomponent site would be American Civil War earthworks constructed at the same location as a prehistoric Mississippian village. The cultural affiliation category in the list below refers only to periods in which the most significant occupation or event (e.g., a battle) took place at the site.

  5. Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehner_Mammoth-Kill_Site

    In 1952, Ed Lehner discovered extinct mammoth bone fragments on his ranch, at the locality now known as the Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site. He notified the Arizona State Museum, and a summer of heavy rains in 1955 exposed more bones. Excavations, led by William W. Wasley and Emil Haury, took place in 1955–56, and again in 1974–75.

  6. Final Fantasy VII - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Fantasy_VII

    Final Fantasy VII [a] is a 1997 role-playing video game developed by Square for the PlayStation.The seventh main installment in the Final Fantasy series, it was released in Japan by Square and internationally by Sony Computer Entertainment, becoming the first game in the main series to have a PAL release.

  7. Domebo Canyon, Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domebo_Canyon,_Oklahoma

    Domebo Canyon, Oklahoma is a Paleo-Indian archaeological site: the site of a mammoth kill in the prairie of southwestern Oklahoma.The Domebo archaeological site features deposits of both incomplete and partially articulated mammoth skeletal remains.

  8. Midgar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midgar

    Midgar (Japanese: ミッドガル, Hepburn: Middogaru) is a fictional city from the Final Fantasy media franchise. It first appears in the 1997 video game Final Fantasy VII, and is depicted as a bustling metropolis built, occupied, and controlled by the megacorporation Shinra Electric Power Company (神羅電気動力株式会社, Shinra Denki Dōryoku Kabushiki gaisha).

  9. Boxgrove Palaeolithic site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxgrove_Palaeolithic_site

    The Boxgrove Palaeolithic site is an internationally important archaeological site north-east of Boxgrove in West Sussex with findings that date to the Lower Palaeolithic.The oldest human remains in Britain have been discovered on the site, fossils of Homo heidelbergensis dating to 500,000 years ago. [2]