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You are at:Home » Archaeologists Uncover 12,000-Year-Old Dice— And It Wasn’t Where You May Have Expected It To Be
Lifestyle

Archaeologists Uncover 12,000-Year-Old Dice— And It Wasn’t Where You May Have Expected It To Be

17 April 20265 Mins Read

Long before casinos, card tables, or board games existed, people in North America were already playing with chance. Archaeologists recently identified dice used by Indigenous hunter-gatherers more than 12,000 years ago, making them the oldest known dice in the world. These small pieces of bone or wood might seem simple, but they tell a surprisingly vivid story about travel, gatherings, and human connection at the end of the last Ice Age.

When I first read about the discovery, I imagined travelers moving across wide plains thousands of years ago, carrying tools, stories, and perhaps a handful of small dice tucked into a pouch. For modern travelers, the discovery is a reminder that exploration and play have always been intertwined. Wherever people went, they brought games with them.

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@lj_tries_things

Ancient Native American dice have been found to be up to 13,000 years old. What’s the oldest game you know of? *Correction: I misspoke. They push back the date of dice in the “New World” not Old World. **Note: I understand “America” or Native American is not the preferred term for many groups. I use it here for clarity and to use the same language present in the study. #nativeamerican #archaeology #History #LearnOnTikTok #indigenoushistory

♬ Debussy Arabesque – Isabelle Perrin

The Western Plains: Where the World’s Oldest Dice Were Found

The oldest known dice were discovered across archaeological sites in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico, areas that were once home to mobile hunter-gatherer groups living near the end of the last Ice Age. Some artifacts date back roughly 12,900 years, associated with the Folsom culture, a Paleoindian society known for sophisticated hunting technologies and widespread movement across the Great Plains.

These early dice were not cube-shaped like those found in modern board games. Instead they were simple two-sided pieces, sometimes called “binary lots.” Made from bone or wood, they were designed to produce random outcomes, like flipping a coin. Archaeologist Robert Madden examined hundreds of artifacts from dozens of sites in the western United States and identified more than 600 potential dice pieces spread across the Rocky Mountain region and Great Plains.

Related: 120,000-Year-Old Discovery Made in Cave Hidden Under Historic Welsh Castle May Rewrite History as We Know It

For a traveler exploring these landscapes today, it is striking to realize how ancient the human story here really is. Places like Agate Basin in Wyoming and sites across the high plains once hosted communities that gathered, traded, and played games of chance. Standing in those open landscapes, it is easy to imagine the wind sweeping across grasslands while groups sat around a fire tossing small carved pieces onto a flat stone.

Games of Chance in Native American Culture

As per The Art Newspaper, the discovery challenges a long-held belief that dice and gambling originated in ancient civilizations of the Old World, such as Mesopotamia or Egypt. Instead, the archaeological evidence now suggests that Indigenous societies in North America were using dice more than 6,000 years earlier than previously known examples elsewhere.

But these games were not simply about gambling in the modern sense. Researchers believe they played a powerful social role within Native American cultures, according to Live Science. Games of chance created neutral spaces where different groups could meet, exchange goods, share knowledge, and build alliances. In societies where people moved frequently across large territories, such interactions were essential for maintaining relationships and cooperation.

Related: Construction Crew Makes a 300-Year-Old Discovery While Excavating in Historic U.K. City

Interestingly, historical accounts suggest that many dice games were played primarily by women, highlighting the important social and cultural roles women held in many Indigenous communities. These games were not only entertainment but also a way to structure interaction, resolve disputes, or redistribute goods among groups.

What Ancient Dice Tell Us About Early Human Thinking

At first glance, a simple bone die may not seem revolutionary. Yet archaeologists say these objects reveal deeper insights into early human understanding of probability and randomness, per Live Science. The dice were intentionally designed to generate unpredictable outcomes in rule-based games, suggesting that people recognized patterns of chance long before formal mathematics existed.

According to Cambridge University researchers, this is an early form of probabilistic thinking. While Ice Age communities were not calculating statistics, they clearly understood that random outcomes could be used within structured games. This insight makes the dice one of the earliest known examples of humans deliberately working with uncertainty.

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As a traveler, I find that idea fascinating. When we roll dice today during a game night or at a casino, we rarely think about the thousands of years of human curiosity behind that moment. Yet these ancient pieces show that our fascination with chance has deep roots. Humans have always been intrigued by the unpredictable.

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