• Search

Search in Site

Alaska Native News

  • HOME
  • Featured
  • General
  • World
  • National
  • State
  • Rural
  • Arctic
  • Science/Education
  • Health
  • At Sea
  • Politics
  • Weather
  • Tides
  • Entertainment
    • Your Horoscope
    • Daily Crossword/Sudoku
    • Comics
  • Opinions/Op/Ed/Letters
    • Op/Ed and the Editor
    • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • North Slope/Northwest Alaska
  • Interior Alaska
  • Southwest Alaska
  • Southcentral
  • Southeast Alaska
  • This Day in Alaskan History
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. land bridge
  4. /
  5. Page 2
Home»Posts tagged with»land bridge (Page 2)

Was the Bering Land Bridge a Good Place to Live?

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Feb 26, 2018   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Was the Bering Land Bridge a Good Place to Live?

During the coldest days of the last ice age, the Bering Land Bridge was 1,000 miles wide, a belt buckle the size of Australia that connected North America and Asia. That mysterious land of green plants, streams and hills persisted for thousands of years, until seas swelling with glacial melt ate it up. All that […]

Ice-Age Lesson: Large Mammals Need Room to Roam

By Meghan Murphy | UAF on Nov 3, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Ice-Age Lesson: Large Mammals Need Room to Roam

A study of life and extinctions among woolly mammoths and other ice-age animals suggests that interconnected habitats can help Arctic mammal species survive environmental changes. The study appears online Nov. 2 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Short periods of warm climate in the midst of the last ice age triggered boom-and-bust cycles in the populations of large mammals in […]

Ancient Babies Boost Bering Land Bridge Layover

By Lee Siegel | University of Utah Communications on Oct 28, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Ancient Babies Boost Bering Land Bridge Layover

University of Utah scientists deciphered maternal genetic material from two babies buried together at an Alaskan campsite 11,500 years ago. They found the infants had different mothers and were the northernmost known kin to two lineages of Native Americans found farther south throughout North and South America. By showing that both genetic lineages lived so […]

Genome Analysis Pinpoints Arrival and Spread of First Americans

By Robert Sanders | University of California-Berkeley on Jul 21, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Genome Analysis Pinpoints Arrival and Spread of First Americans

The original Americans came from Siberia in a single wave no more than 23,000 years ago, at the height of the last Ice Age, and apparently hung out in the north – perhaps for thousands of years – before spreading in two distinct populations throughout North and South America, according to a new genomic analysis. […]

« Previous 1 2
  • Advertise with Us
  • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Contact Alaska Native News
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
© 2023, ↑ Alaska Native News
Log in -