No it wouldn't have reached Asia because he had to cross into the Pacific from the Atlantic through the strait.
the building of a railroad through Texas!
Early humans likely reached North America by crossing the Bering Land Bridge during the last Ice Age. They may have traveled to South America by following the coastline or through inland routes. Antarctica was likely reached much later, potentially by seafaring populations navigating through the waters surrounding the continent.
I think that through all the arguments and the evidence proven, that the Vikings by far were the first to have discovered the America's. They may not have done it intently but there is evidence proving that the Vikings were there centuries before Columbus.
through email
The west coast of North America likely saw the first sustained arrival of people to the continent. Although there are other theories, most scientists believe that the first significant groups of people came from Asia, through today's Bering Strait area, then through modern Alaska, and from there spread throughout North America and to South America.
On October 21, 1519, he reached the tip of South America. It took him more than four weeks to go through what was later named the Strait of Magellan to the Pacific Ocean, which he named for its peaceful surface.
No. It does not run throught North America. It DOES run through South America though.
A conjecture
There was nothing special in Lyndon Johnsons term as president. No, America reached the moon, ending the space race. He followed through with John F. Kennedy's hope for reaching the moon.
These albums reached number one in America. Planet Waves Blood on the Tracks Desire Modern Times Together Through Life And in the UK these albums reached number-one: The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan Bringing It All Back Home John Wesley Harding Nashville Skyline Self Portrait New Morning Together Through Life
Alexander Mackenzie's expedition in 1793 aimed to find a water route to the Pacific Ocean through North America. He hoped to establish a fur trade route through the continent, competing with the Hudson's Bay Company. Mackenzie successfully reached the Pacific Ocean, becoming the first European to cross North America north of Mexico.