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Did T. rex's 'grandparents' migrate over the Bering Land Bridge? Tyrannosaurus rex evolved in North America, specifically in Laramidia, the western half of the continent.
Poking holes in the sea floor that used to be part of the Bering Land Bridge, researchers have found that large swaths of it were floodplains pocked with bogs and ponds that may have restricted ...
Why did some species, including ancient humans, cross the Bering Land Bridge between modern-day Siberia and Alaska during the last Ice Age? The picture has only gotten more complex.
Scientists have long assumed the Bering Land Bridge was a dry, grassy tundra. New research indicates it was anything but.
Geologists found evidence beneath the ocean showing that the Bering Land Bridge was a vast marshland, which deterred some animal species from crossing.
Discover the Bering Land Bridge, an ancient Ice Age landmass that connected Asia and North America. Learn how it facilitated human and animal migration, its unique environment, and its lasting ...
The Bering Land Bridge once connected Russia to Alaska and was a crossing point for some of the first humans to populate the Americas. But during certain periods, the bridge was either impassable or ...
Eventually, some crossed the Bering Land Bridge. They start showing up in the North American fossil record between 300,000 and 130,000 years ago.
A research project found that the Bering Strait is at least a meter deeper on the Alaska side than previously believed, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Alaska ...
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