Live Science Today: Monte Verde controversy and heatwave lashes the West

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View of a stream with green grass on the banks and cows in the background.

A view of the Monte Verde archaeological site along the Chinchihuapi Cove in Chile, taken in 2012. (Image credit: Valdivia Geology (CC PAR 2.0))

A key archaeological site in Chile may be thousands of years younger than previously thought, a controversial study suggests threatens to rewrite the oldest history of human settlement in South America.

Monte Verde, a Paleolithic archaeological site located in the mountains of southern Chile, is one of the oldest human settlements in the Americas and is believed to be 14,500 years old. Its discovery in 1976 fundamentally changed the way archaeologists think about the arrival of the first Americans on the continent, with the site being 1,500 years older than the arrival of the Clovis people across North America.

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