News

During the last ice age, people journeyed across the ancient land bridge connecting Asia to North America. That land is now submerged underwater, but a newly created digital map reveals how the ...
On average, global sea levels were about 425 feet (130 meters) lower during the LGM than they are today, which helped keep the Bering Land Bridge open for migrating humans and ice age giants ...
A new study that reconstructs the history of sea level at the Bering Strait shows that the Bering Land Bridge connecting Asia to North America did not emerge until around 35,700 years ago, less than ...
but some studies suggest people may have lived in Beringia throughout the height of the ice age. "People may have started going across as soon as the land bridge formed," Pico said. Archaeologists ...
A new study shows that the Bering Land Bridge, the strip of land that once connected Asia to Alaska, emerged far later during the last ice age than previously thought. The unexpected findings shorten ...
Genetic evidence supports a theory that ancestors of Native Americans lived for 15,000 years on the Bering Land Bridge between Asia and North America until the last ice age ended Editor's note ...
The Bering Land Bridge may have resembled Alaska’s present-day Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge, according to researchers who presented at AGU. © Steve Hillebrand ...
but some studies suggest people may have lived in Beringia throughout the height of the ice age. "People may have started going across as soon as the land bridge formed," Pico said. The new study ...