The real name is "Land-Bridge" And it is the Bering Strait.
It is believed that there was at one time, a 'land bridge' connecting what is now Alaska and Siberia … it's only 'bout 60 miles. The first people are thought to have crossed that short span to the 'New World.'
== == Danish explorer Vitus Jonassen Bering
bering strait
to find riches
Probably, they were people who crossed a temporary land bridge from Siberia to Alaska, and then moved downward between glaciers, although some archaeologists believe that people may have come to South America on boats that they were able to cross the ocean with. These early peoples evolved into the Inuit, Inca, Maya, Zapotec, Anasazi and other tribes over time.
Alaska is the US state closest to where the first people crossed a land bridge into North America. The Bering Land Bridge connected Alaska and Siberia during the last Ice Age, allowing early humans to migrate into North America.
Asians who crossed into Alaska over the Bering Sea land bridge in the last ice age.
When humans crossed the Bering land bridge into Alaska many thousands of years ago.
Early man crossed the land bridge over the Berring Sea.
It is believed that there was at one time, a 'land bridge' connecting what is now Alaska and Siberia … it's only 'bout 60 miles. The first people are thought to have crossed that short span to the 'New World.'
On the first day of opening of Bridge, a total of 1800 vehicles and 150,300 people crossed it
== == Danish explorer Vitus Jonassen Bering
People most likely came to "America" via the land bridge called Beringia that used to be present connecting modern day Russia and Alaska. It is debated what year the first people crossed that land bridge, but it is typically accepted to be about 10,000 BCE.
The people who first came to America came in ships or crossed over an ice bridge.
The people who first came to America came in ships or crossed over an ice bridge.
They crossed it to get from Asia to North America while following mammoths.
That would be the Bering land bridge. It was around 1000 miles wide (north to south) at it's widest. It connected present-day Alaska. and eastern Siberia.