They came here by crossing the beringia bridge
The first people in the Americas were bands of hunter-gatherers.
The First Nations Peoples of the Americas practiced this craft.
Polynesians did not discover the Americas. The Polynesians primarily settled in the islands of the Pacific Ocean and did not have extensive contact with the American continents. It was the Indigenous peoples of the Americas who were the first to inhabit and discover the land.
The first explorers who arrived in the Americas encountered Indigenous peoples who had been living in the region for thousands of years. These encounters were often marked by cultural misunderstandings, conflicts, and the exchange of goods and ideas.
john Cabot did meet the first nations peoples. Sorry to say but there was no evidence for me to explain about this.
Religion was practiced by the indigenous peoples of the Americas probably for tens of thousands of years. If the land bridge of the northwest really was the means of egress from Asia into the Americas, then religion was first practiced in what is now Canada and the northwest US.
The first Basque known to have been killed in the settling of the Americas was Martín de Aranibar. He was part of Juan de Grijalva's expedition in 1518 and died during a skirmish with indigenous peoples in present-day Mexico.
People from Great Britain populated America in the mid 17th century
One of the most important was at a dig or an archaeologist site ,located in southwestern Pennsylvania.
one is the land bridge theory the other is the costal theory and the l.ast one is the Australia theory.
It is thought the Pre-Columbian peoples of the Americas arrived from Sibertia via a land bridge across what is now the Bering straight.
The scientific methods employed in the construction of origin theories of Canada's First Nations peoples are diverse and the results are inconclusive. Skeletal evidence of what is believed to be the first modern human, or homo sapien, was found in Africa and is dated to 40,000 years ago. Based upon this information, scientists place the origin of the human species outside of the Americas. This is contrary to the belief of First Nations peoples. According to their oral tradition, they originated in North America and did not migrate from somewhere else. Scientists from several different disciplines support theories of migration from Asia to the Americas, but they disagree over when, how or why the first humans came to the Americas.