The human race is believed to have arrived in North America around 15,000 years ago during the last Ice Age, primarily via a land bridge called Beringia that connected Siberia to Alaska. As glaciers receded, these early populations migrated southward and eastward across the continent in search of food and resources. Over time, diverse cultures and societies developed across North America, adapting to various environments and lifestyles. This migration is supported by archaeological evidence and genetic studies of ancient populations.
The vast majority of North America is Caucasian race. Well over 80-90%.
White americans take up about 73% of America.
The grizzly is the race of brown bear found inland, in western North America.They live usually in the uplands of Western North America.
All gorillas in North America are captive in zoos. They are cared for and bred in the hope that should they be wiped out in the wild (by poaching and their environment being taken over by farmers, human population expansion, etc) they can be preserved as an animal race - and not go the way of the extinct Dodo.
Caucasianlatinasianafricanindianetc. There are many different races and heritages in America, so there isn't just on uniform race everyone goes by other than the human race.
In his book "Guns Germs & Steel" author Jared Diamond has several good flow charts of the dispersal of the human race around the world. These charts indicate humans arrived in North America some 14,000 years ago. The routes include the land bridge across the Bering Syrait and sea routes along the Pacific rim from Asia. On the East coat the Europeans reached North America early in the Middle Ages.
Humans, most people believe that human life originated in Africa. Then expanded from there up into Europe and Asia. People crossed over from Siberia into North America on a land bridge, but soon afterward the land bridge disappeared under water, cutting North Americans off until the Europeans discovered the continent. So, no one specific "race" of humans is the oldest, but the common belief is that humans came from Africa.
People populate the human race. There is only one human race
Some Hispanics are considered part of the caucasion race. You do have many American Indians from South, Central and North America that speak Spanish as hispanic is not actually a race.
Race America was created in 1990.
One kind of race is a 'who can do it faster' race, whilst another race could be a 'human race' or the type of human you are. An example of a human race is African, or Chinese.
White, if you use conventional "racial" terms. Brown was of English and Dutch descent and his family claimed descent from Peter Brown, who came to North America on the Mayflower. Brown himself would have preferred to be considered a member of the human race since he was not one to deal in "race" terms.