Each year, something new is uncovered at the Thomsen Center Archeodome at the Mitchell Prehistoric Indian Village.
But this year, the big find has been something small.
Researchers working the archaeological site along Lake Mitchell have discovered troves of small, charred kernels of corn and sunflowers, each only a few millimeters wide, that remain intact more than 1,000 years after people lived in the area along Firesteel Creek. Researchers have also found corn cobs, which they say show how much agriculture has changed, and affirms that people of the region had a diverse diet.
For more, see the Mitchell Republic.
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