From a religious point of view:
It isn't known were Adam and Eve originally came from since the whole face of the earth was changed during the flood. There may not even have been continents at the time.
Some people refer to the time before Europeans arrived in the Americas as Pre-Colonial days. The Europeans went through a period of Renaissance before the Colonists first came to the Americas.
No, the Romans were not the first people to travel to the American continent. While they were advanced in many ways, there is no historical evidence to suggest that Romans reached the Americas. The first known arrivals were the Norse, led by Leif Erikson around the year 1000, and indigenous peoples had been living in the Americas for thousands of years prior to any European contact.
The North American continent was discovered in 1492. Martin Luther with his 95 Theses occurred in 1517 in Germany. The beginning of the settlement of the Americas didn't occur for another 100 years, about 1620. The Counter-Reformation was the Roman Catholic Church's response to the changes brought about by the Reformation. So any effect on people occurred long before settlers came to America.
Christopher Columbus brought the first white people to the Americas. There was already Native Indians that lived here first before anyone.
Scientists believe that the first Americans, called the Paleo-Indians, came to the continent from Asia well over 10,000 years ago.
people who worked on the sugar plantation who were brought to the Americas were brought from the continent of AFRICA. signed : WESLEY ISAACS
It depends who you ask, because some people believe that the Americas are one continent, but generally speaking, South America is a continent.
Some people refer to the time before Europeans arrived in the Americas as Pre-Colonial days. The Europeans went through a period of Renaissance before the Colonists first came to the Americas.
Originally, people believed that the Clovis people were the first inhabitants of the Americas due to their distinctive stone tools. It was thought that they were the earliest human culture on the continent until later discoveries pushed back the timeline of human presence in the Americas.
Africans.
There were no cattle in the Americas prior to the coming of the Europeans. In North America, however, there were plenty of buffalo.
"The Americas" include all of North America. So I'd say people from the North American continent, which includes different countries, are definitely welcome in the world and have been for a very long time.
People from Europe, Australia, and the Americas used to call Africa the "dark continent." There were two reasons. One, was that it was very difficult for explorers who went there, and many of them died of illnesses such as yellow fever and malaria. Second, was because most of the continent was unknown as a result of that difficulty in exploration.
Scientists believe that the first Americans, called the Paleo-Indians, came to the continent from Asia well over 10,000 years ago.
it is highly likely that a range of people have breifly lived in holland before coming to america.
Because of war, ethnic clensing and slavery, between 1500 and 1800 as many as 30 milion africans were taken to the americas as slaves.
Scientists believe that the first Americans, called the Paleo-Indians, came to the continent from Asia well over 10,000 years ago.