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Ice Age Hunter-Gatherers Played Dice Games
11 Apr
Summary
- Native Americans used dice for games over 12,000 years ago.
- Games of chance fostered social bonds and trade among groups.
- Ancient dice were found in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico.

Archaeological findings indicate that Native American hunter-gatherers were playing games of chance with dice more than 12,000 years ago, pushing back the known history of dice use by over 6,000 years. These ancient dice, crafted from wood or bone and found at late Pleistocene sites in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico, suggest a sophisticated understanding of chance and randomness.
This discovery challenges previous assumptions that dice and probability originated with Bronze Age societies in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley. The study highlights that these games were not about formal probability theory but involved intentional creation and use of random outcomes in rule-based ways.
Games of chance served a crucial social function, enabling interaction, trade, and mate exchange between groups with no prior relationship. This practice fostered new social bonds and indicated early human engagement with probabilistic concepts, reshaping our understanding of global intellectual history.