BBC History Magazine

HISTORY IN THE NEWS

Footprints are “oldest evidence of humans in the Americas”

he question of when humans first arrived in the Americas has long sparked debate, with a series of finds made over the past 20 years pushing that date further and further back. Now sets of footprints discovered near the edge of a lake in New Mexico appear

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine10 min read
Banished. Exiled. Died… Widowed. Berated. Survived.
THEY ARE INVISIBLE BUT INDISPENSABLE. Unremarked, yet always there. Tudor ladies-in-waiting have long been depicted as mere ‘scenery’ in books, plays and films about the 16th century, a backdrop of pretty faces. This is accurate – to a point. A queen
BBC History Magazine2 min read
Dramatic Tales
In November 1682, bodies pressed into Westminster Hall for the trial of Lord Grey, who stood accused of seducing his teenage sister-in-law Henrietta Berkeley into “whoredom and adultery”. Those hoping for theatrics were not disappointed: she arrived,
BBC History Magazine6 min read
Anniversaries
But Nan Winton faces prejudice When Nancy Wigginton – better known by her professional name, Nan Winton – appeared on the nation’s television sets on 20 June 1960, she became the first woman to present the national news on the BBC. The corporation’s

Related Books & Audiobooks