North America
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Bering Land Bridge Connecting Asia and North America Did Not Develop Until Roughly 35,700 Years Ago
The results show that, contrary to what earlier research had suggested, the growth of the ice sheets and the subsequent drop in sea level happened surprisingly quickly and much later in the glacial cycle.
Latest Research Articles
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Preserved Ice Age Footprints Challenge Scientists’ Understanding of How and When People First Reached North America
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World's Oldest Stone Fish Weir Dating Back 11,000 Years Ago Discovered in Alaska
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Canine Distemper Virus Outbreaks Are More Likely To Kill Black Wolves Across North America
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Ancient Humans Might Have Settled in South America over 18,000 Years Ago After Discovery of Chromosomes
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Invasive Species of Alien Earthworms Conquers North America
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Meteor Storm with over 1,000 Shooting Stars Per Hour May be Seen over the Night Sky of North America Next Week
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Global Warming: NOAA Study Reveals Aerosol Emission Reductions in North America and Europe Increase Atlantic Hurricane Activity
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7-Million-Year Disappearance of Cat Species in North America Explained
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State of Emergency: Overland Flooding Due to Heavy Rain Prompts over 1,000 Evacuations in Alberta Province, Canada
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Wildfires Cause a 'New Peak to Air Pollution' in the Pacific Northwest and Unhealthy Air Pollutants: New Study
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Ancient Ice Wall Might Have Prevented Travel from Asia to the Americas Through the Beringia Land Bridge
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Cahokia, Ancient North American City, May Have Fallen Because of Climate Change