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A view of the area of the ice-free corridor today Mikkel Winther Pedersen The traditional story of human migration in the Americas goes like this: A group of stone-age people moved from the area ...
"The ice-free corridor was long considered the principal entry route for the first Americans," said University of Copenhagen PhD student Mikkel Pedersen, lead author of the study, in a news release.
Previous research suggested that an ice-free corridor between the margins of these ice sheets may have enabled travel from Beringia down to the Great Plains. Based on stone tools dating back as ...
Plant and animal DNA buried under two Canadian lakes squashes the idea that the first Americans travelled through an ice-free corridor that extended from Alaska to Montana. Some 14,000 years ago ...
Despite recently getting a cold shoulder from some researchers, a long-standing idea that North America’s first settlers entered the continent via an ice-free inland corridor boasts more ...
The first, the ice-free corridor route, theorizes that 13,500 years ago early humans followed a gap between the ice sheets covering the top of North America down the Canadian Rockies. The second ...
Heber Valley is viewed from the Rock and Roll Train. Building a free-flow corridor bypass through the Heber Valley was identified by the Utah Department of Transportation as the best way to ...