Assuming the question "......onto the land" is refering to the continent North America, there are a couple of plausible answers, and both are argubly true.
1. The PaleoIndians--following their food source--animals, walked. They came across the Bering Strait (a "land bridge", at that time) into North America.
2. Asian exployers/navigaters touched land briefly down around the 14th-15th century, but did not stay.
Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins were the crew on Apollo 11 and were the first team to land on the moon. They travelled from Earth by space rocket and Neil Armstrong was the first person to set foot onto the lunar soil.
The first person to land on space was Neil Armstrong
Who was the first person to land on the moon at christmas
Yes Neil Armstrong was the first man to land on the moon.
As we know that neil Armstrong was the first person to land on moon.after that no any person has land on moon yet.so we can say that no any person has land on moon since from mr.Armstrong.
roney mullen
In the Sea of Tranquility.
Around 400 to 350 million years ago the fist vertebras clambered onto land, they were tetrapods.
Algae are one of the oldest lineages, from before plants went onto land. Bryophytes are of the first lineage to live on land.
Sea breezes come from the sea onto the land, and land breezes come from the land onto the sea.
I think christopher colombus was the first person to land in the us first
Probably asians crossing the bering strait. The first europeans to step onto land in America were most probably Vikings. The first European to oficially step onto the American continent was Amerigo Vespucio. Columbus steped onto an American island a few years earlier but only reached the continent on his fourth trip to America. By then Vespucio had already reached the continent.