It acts as a land-bridge between North America and South America.
The landbridge only lasted 24,000 years.
Alaska and Asia are pretty close. Scientists believe that there use to be a landbridge there. The Natives went across the landbridge, probably following an animal around the ice age. The generations of Natives went across the landbridge, then making it to America. Then, they populated the lower area.
by the landbridge falling apart.
ALASKA?
Where the Bering Strait is now. For some time it was a landbridge, but it would've been inhospitable.
I'm not sure where "here" is, but horses were brought to America by the spainards, and horses traveled to Asia as in like 7000 BC or something by landbridge.
Yes, there was a land bridge known as Pangaea that connected all of the continents around 300 million years ago. Over time, this supercontinent drifted apart due to the movement of tectonic plates. Today, the continents are separate landmasses.
Ireland was first settled around 10,000 BC. It is thought that the landbridge with Britain has disappeared by that stage so the first settlers would have arrived in Ireland by sea.
You might want to check google maps, but if I remember correctly there is the Ri-Diku-lus-e L'ng landbridge that connects Venezuela with South Africa.
They travelled by foot on land but if on the sea, they would have a boat something similar to an umiak or baydara.
Mexico, Mexico, Mexico Mexico,Mexico, Mexico
There was no landbridge to Britain. Without that he could not send his army, therefore he had to settle with the Luftwaffe attacking by air.