Native Americans have been playing with dice in games of chance for more than 12,000 years, according to a new paper ...
Robert Madden of Colorado State University identified and examined more than 600 sets of dice, or binary lots, recovered from ...
New research shows that Native Americans were making dice for gaming thousands of years before anyone else in the world.
A new study shows that dice and games of chance date back thousands of years earlier than experts previously thought.
Some of the dice-like artifacts studied. (Madden, Am. Antiq., 2026) A new study may have identified the oldest known dice, ...
Surprising new research reveals that Native Americans invented the world's first dice after the Last Ice Age, over 12,000 ...
The Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples recently accepted artifacts from officials at the University of Denver Museum of Anthropology. Most of the returned items are believed to be linked to burial sites.
The earliest examples were discovered at Late Pleistocene Folsom-period archaeological sites in Wyoming, Colorado, and New ...
A new study shows that dice and games of chance date back thousands of years earlier than experts previously thought.
A massive collection of Native American artifacts gathered over decades is headed to the Tamástslikt (Tah-must-likt) Cultural ...