People migrated to China about 2 million years ago from Africa. But there is another theory that Chinese people evolved and migrated from Siberia.
They arrived via a land bridge between modern day Alaska and Eastern Siberia.
They were, of course, no where near as advanced as we are today but the answer is yes.
They arrived via a land bridge between modern day Alaska and Eastern Siberia.
They came from Alaska or Siberia
There is some dispute as to where the earliest people in The Americas came from. Many historians believe they traveled across a then frozen Bering Strait all the way from Siberia and then traveled down through what is now Canada and America.
Scientists believe that during the last ice age, around 15,000 to 20,000 years ago, people migrated from Asia to the Americas by crossing a land bridge that connected Siberia to Alaska, known as Beringia. As the ice age glaciers locked up water, sea levels dropped, creating this land bridge that allowed for human migration.
The early Inuit people (Eskimos) discovered that area at some point after they had migrated over from Russia (Siberia).
Siberia - Also known as the Bering Strait Theory, the Land Bridge theory has been widely accepted since the 1930s. This model of migration into the New World proposes that people migrated from Siberia into Alaska, tracking big game animal herds. They were able to cross between the two continents by a land bridge called the Bering Land Bridge, which spanned what is now the Bering Strait, during the Wisconsin glaciation, the last major stage of the Pleistocene beginning 50,000 years ago and ending some 10,000 years ago, when ocean levels were 60 metres (200 ft) lower than today.
One way that the ancients might have migrated to what is now known as the Americas is over the land bridge that formerly existed between what is now known as Russia and Alaska.
The first people to come to America were likely the ancestors of modern Indigenous peoples, who migrated from Asia to North America via the Bering Land Bridge, known as Beringia. This land bridge connected Siberia to Alaska during the last Ice Age, facilitating their journey. Over thousands of years, these groups spread throughout the continent, adapting to various environments.
Scientists believe that the first Americans, called the Paleo-Indians, came to the continent from Asia well over 10,000 years ago. At that time, North America and Asia were connected by a land bridge between what is now Alaska and Siberia. Scientists call the ancient land bridge that once existed Beringia.The first Paleo-Indians that crossed Beringia may have been following herds of animals.