The first major migration of people to the new world is credited to Christopher Columbus. There were major migrations before Christopher Columbus. The Paleo-Indians were the first to make America their home. The Native Americans were not all related. The Native Americans were previously thought to all be related. DNA testing has proven that the Native Americans were two different groups of people who entered the land at the same time but independently from each other about 15,000 years before Columbus.
From an Article by "Icabod" The first people into the Americas were nomadic hunters. They didn't plan to come here, they followed the migrations of the game. We don't consider them "Native Americans" as they weren't born here and they predate the development of today's Native Americans(Indians). Rather we call them "PaleoIndians." They walked across dry land from Asia. The great ice age lowered the water of the Bering strait and created a new land, Beringia. When the ice melted, the land bridge disappeared, but the way south was open. The first Europeans to arrive in North America -- at least the first for whom there is solid evidence -- were Norse, traveling west from Greenland, where Erik the Red had founded a settlement around the year 985. In 1001 his son Leif is thought to have explored the northeast coast of what is now Canada and spent at least one winter there. Many European fishermen fished the waters off the northern coasts of North America and the US but did not settle there. The Spanish conquistadores explored the Southwest of what would become the US in the 1500s but did not establish permanent settlements. St. Augustine, Florida, was founded in 1565 by the Spanish. The British tried to establish a settlement in Virginia, known as Roanake, Virginia, in 1587 but the colony, known as the lost colony, did not survive. The Jamestown colony in 1607 was the first permanent British colony in North America.
It is believed that the first major migration of people to the New World were ancestors of the Native Americans. They are believed to have migrated from NE Asia.
First come, first served First come, first served is a phrase popularized during the nineteenth century, though it may have been in use before that time. ... First come, first served describes a situation whereby customers are served in the order in which they arrive, those who arrive first are served first. The term first come, first served was popularized by shopkeepers during the nineteenth century.
the united states has a major role in world affairs because when foreign have national problems, they come and usually depend on the united states to fix it. The united states would be like a main character in a play involving the whole world.
The Germanic tribes, which probably originated from a mixture of peoples along the Baltic Sea coast, inhabited the northern part of the European continent by about 500 B.C. By 100 B.C., they had advanced into the central and southern areas of present-day Germany. At that time, there were three major tribal groups: the eastern Germanic peoples lived along the Oder and Vistula rivers; the northern Germanic peoples inhabited the southern part of present-day Scandinavia; and the western Germanic peoples inhabited the extreme south of Jutland and the area between the North Sea and the Elbe, Rhine, and Main rivers.
when did the first muscical greeting card come out?
If "melting pot" was one of "the following", that was probably it.
To fish and trade with Aboriginal peoples.
the world.
a
christians do not hate gothics, but want them to come with them to heaven when the day of judment comes you can not be appart of the world
fossil fuels homie
Gold,Sliver
The first Puritans to come to America (the founders of Massachusetts Bay Colony) came on a fleet of 17 ships. The flagship was the Arbella/Arabella.
A. Canals and Railroads
majority
biblically the first man is adam
No.
they come from outer space