No.
Early humans walked and migrated from the connecting continents of Africa, Asia, and Europe. When land bridges formed during the Ice Age, humans then walked across them to the continents of Australia and North America (then spreading to South America from here). Humans also used boats to transport between Asia and Australia, and may have even used them from Asia to North America.
North America, Souuth America,Asia, Kentucky
the bering streit :)
Yes, early humans were able to migrate from Asia to North America during the last Ice Age by crossing a land bridge known as Beringia. The land bridge connected present-day Siberia and Alaska due to lower sea levels caused by the large amount of water stored in glaciers. This allowed humans and animals to cross over from Asia to North America.
North America and Asia were connected by a land bridge known as Beringia during the last Ice Age. This land bridge allowed early humans to migrate between the two continents.
asia
The Bering land bridge connected Asia and North America. It is believed to have served as a migration route for early humans and animals between the two continents.
Asia and North America are separate continents, so Asia is not in North America.
The Bering Land Bridge is the land where people crossed from Asia to America during the last Ice Age. This narrow stretch of land connected modern-day Alaska and eastern Siberia, allowing early humans to migrate from Asia into North America.
Europe, Asia, North America
The land bridge connecting Asia and North America is called Beringia. It was located in the present-day Bering Strait between Siberia and Alaska. This land bridge emerged during the last Ice Age when sea levels dropped, allowing early humans to migrate to North America.
Early Americans, or Native Americans, migrated from East Asia to North America and then from here into South America, where their people flourished for thousands of years.