CHANCES LATER IN THE WEEK. I’LL BE BACK TO TALK ALL ABOUT IT. THANK YOU KOAT WORKING TO LEARN MORE ABOUT A CITIZEN WHO WAS DETAINED BY ICE IN ARIZONA, NAVAJO NATION PRESIDENT BOO NYGREN POSTED ON ...
A new study claims Native Americans have been using dice to gamble and explore probability for more than 12,000 years.
The new research suggests use of dice in games of chance more than 6,000 years before such practices appeared in Europe ...
Stacker has chronicled social, scientific, and business inventions that changed America over hundreds of years.
Surprising new research reveals that Native Americans invented the world's first dice after the Last Ice Age, over 12,000 ...
"This is the first evidence we have of structured human engagement with the concepts of chance and randomness." ...
The oldest known dice in the world are roughly 12,000 years old and from western North America, a new study suggests. Before the discovery, ...
A study of ancient artifacts suggests Native American dice games began thousands of years earlier than previously documented.
Some of the dice-like artifacts studied. (Madden, Am. Antiq., 2026) A new study may have identified the oldest known dice, ...
Smithsonian’s Americans exhibit at Cornell Creative Arts Center in Kingston explores Native imagery in US culture through history, media, and myth.
The big thinkers at Aperture highlight weird inventions that have changed humanity forever. Trump gives Iran 48-hour ultimatum to reopen Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on power plants Cuban official ...
The Roaring Twenties didn't just roar with jazz, flappers, and speakeasies—it hummed with the sound of innovation. As America emerged from World War I, the decade ushered in unprecedented economic ...