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- Herb and Dorothy Vogel redefine what it means to be an art collector.
- Immigration in the United States has evolved into a thorny problem. American policymakers have reacted to immigration by enacting policies in the hopes that South American immigrants might be deterred from coming to the United States for better opportunities. These policies made life harder for Hispanic communities. In Arkansas, the Hispanic Women's organization of Arkansas formed in the 1990s to help the Latino community. It assists Hispanic youth, educates the community, and advocates for immigrant rights.
- At Badger Hole, Oklahoma, the Time Team America crew excavates what may be the largest Folsom-period bison kill site in North America. Long extinct, Bison Antiquus roamed the plains 10,000 years ago. How were Paleoindian hunters able to kill so many of these massive bison-weighing 1500 pounds each-without the help of bows and arrows or even horses? The lives of these ancient ancestors seem elusive, but by investigating bison bones, arrowheads and more, the Team discovers clues about their habitat, hunting range, and their ingenuity that will help us understand them.
- In Cortez, Colorado, the Team explores the Dillard site, a village that some 1500 years ago was home to people of the Basketmaker III era, a culture that advanced itself with technologies like farming, pottery, and the bow and arrow. The innovations of the Basketmaker III era led to the complex, beautiful Ancestral Pueblo cliff dwellings of the nearby Mesa Verde region. Recent discoveries at the Dillard site-located at Crow Canyon Archaeological Center-lead researchers to ask: was this site more than just a village? Was this concentrated settlement the scene of a turning point in human history? Time Team America hopes to help solve the mystery.