The incas of ancient times from a small village to the north of alaska crossed the bering strait in 1728 to travel to the americas in search of new land
The paleo-Indians probably entered north America by crossing a land bridge spanning the Bering Strait. Since back in the 1990's shards of pottery were found that tested to be between 20,000 and 25,000 years old in the southwest, it is hardly likely that the theory of the natives crossing any alleged land bridge has any merit.
Both England and France claimed land in North American .Which country's explorers first claimed the land? Answer this question…
I think christopher colombus was the first person to land in the us first
Over a land bridge that crossed the Bering Strait (APEX) !/
The correct spelling is "land bridge" (a connecting landform that permits land migration).
yea missour have all that land in st charles crossing the brige
No. Definately not. No way. You just go on the boat or the plane. You cannot drive. Put your car on the boat if you must.
the last people to cross the bridge were the natives to the Russian/Alaskan areas..
the tundra
Just how you would cross any other land!
3500 B.C. cross a land bridge.
Alexander Mackenzie
The greater availability of low-cost products
The land where you mom lives
Yes, Jacques Cartier had an impact on the First Nations people through his interactions and trade with them during his explorations of North America. He established relationships with the Indigenous peoples he encountered, though there were instances of conflict as well due to misunderstandings and competing interests. His expeditions paved the way for further European exploration and colonization of the region, which ultimately had lasting consequences for the First Nations people.
In the ice age they used the land bridge connecting asia to north america to cross over into what today is known as alaska