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However, it's still a mystery exactly when humans began crossing the land bridge. Genetic studies show that the first humans to cross became genetically isolated from people in East Asia between ...
The Bering Land Bridge once connected Russia to Alaska and was a crossing point for some of the first humans to populate the Americas. But during certain periods, the bridge was either impassable or ...
Scientists have long assumed the Bering Land Bridge was a dry, grassy tundra. New research indicates it was anything but.
A new study that reconstructs the history of sea levels shows that the Bering Land Bridge connecting Asia to North America did not emerge until around 35,700 years ago, allowing humans to arrive ...
But the question of where they went next has been a subject of considerable controversy, with some researchers arguing that harsh climate conditions didn't allow humans to settle in North America ...
Why did some species, including ancient humans, cross the Bering Land Bridge between modern-day Siberia and Alaska during the last Ice Age? The picture has only gotten more complex.
Campus News Bering Land Bridge formed surprisingly late during last ice age, study finds By reconstructing the sea level history of the Bering Strait, scientists found that the strait remained flooded ...
The first people to enter the Americas may have taken the coastal route along the Bering Strait Land Bridge during these two periods.
The boggy landscape of the Bering land bridge may have allowed some ice age animals to cross easily, while others stayed in Asia.
Scientists have long assumed the Bering Land Bridge was a dry, grassy tundra. New research indicates it was anything but.
“People may have started going across as soon as the land bridge formed,” Pico said. The new study used an analysis of nitrogen isotopes in seafloor sediments to determine when the Bering Strait was ...