Stanford and Bradley suggest that the first Americans likely came from Northeast Asia, crossing over to North America via a land bridge known as Beringia, which connected Siberia to Alaska. This migration is believed to have occurred during the last Ice Age, when lower sea levels exposed the land bridge. They propose that these early populations gradually spread southward and eastward across the continent.
I think that African-Americans were brought over on boats and were captured by the Europeans.
I think they were Taino Indians
Women were left out of the Declaration of Independence.
well at first the native americans did not know what to expect so they welcomed them. but i am just a 6th grader so i dont know much
French. ===== Ummm, I think the people of the First Nations were here long before the French arrived -- thousands of years before the French arrived.
The mouse was invented by Douglas Englebart in 1963, who at the time was working at the Stanford Research Institute, which was a think tank sponsored by Stanford University.
I think it was the dutch
The first native Americans are the people who came from Asia. (i think)
i think it was in 1958
i think the north americans
because he was
The ways I can think of are: Bradley, Bradlie, Bradli, Bradlea, Bradly, and Bradleigh.
Te Paleionon Indians, i think
i think they make it just like Americans do
I think the first tribe to ever step foot on this land is the Iroqouis.
Yes of course
I think its hapkido.