The remains of a teenage girl, aged 15–17 at her death, and nicknamed <u>"Naia"</u>, <em><u>that are more than 12,000 years old</u></em>, were inside a flooded cave located near <em><u>Tulum, Quintana Roo in Mexico</u></em>. They were recovered in 2007 by the cavers Alejandro Álvarez, Alberto Nava and Franco Attolini, of the<em><u> Tulum Speleological Project (PET)</u></em>, dedicated to the registry of the underwater heritage of the region. After seven years of research, a multidisciplinary team from USA, Canada and Mexico, whose principal investigator of the research on <u>"Naia"</u>, <em><u>James Chatters</u></em>, an archaeologist and paleontologist, reported in 2014, that <u>"Naia</u>" has already contributed to understand the origins of the first Americans and her DNA <em><u>confirms the idea that "a single group of Asian emigrants gave rise to both the earliest American settlers and modern Native Americans"</u></em>. <u>So, right answer is B. Members from one single, genetically uniform population populated the Americas from at least 16,000 years ago.</u>
Ancient Egyptian funerary.
(im not 100% sure, but click this link for more)
<span>https://www.ancient.eu/Egyptian_Burial/</span>
Umm the judicial branch off also known as cops
Answer:
hi
Explanation:
i don't know you but you look like good person
<span>The children with exceptionally high iqs that were studied by Louis termin eventually became known as Termites. He followed them through out there lives. His goal was to disprove the "early ripe-early rot" myth.</span>