People from Asia crossed berengia, a land bridge going into North America, and followed herds of animals since they were hunter/gatherers.
B Anthropologists believe that the earliest settlers migrated from Asia thousands of years ago
Explanation:
- The first American inhabitants, Paleo-Indians, arrived in the New World with a single, unique wave of migration from Siberia 23,000 years ago, to be divided into today's groups only later, DNA research showed.
- Most scientists agree that the continent was inhabited by people crossing the Bering Land Bridge (at that time there was a crossroads between Siberia and Alaska), and archaeological discoveries so far indicate that humans were present on American soil 15,000 years ago.
- These migrants split into two major groups about 13,000 years ago, at a time when glaciers were melting and roads inland were opening up in North America, experts say.
Douglas MacArthur was the commander
Answer:
The main theory is that Native Americans reached North America from East Asia, more specifically Siberia, around 14,000 years ago.
The reason why this is the most accepted theory is because it has been proven by genetic studes that Native Americans and East Asians share a great degree of genetic similarity.
According to this theory, at that time, the Bering strait was frozen, and formed a land bridge between Siberia and Alaska. East Asians crossed this bridge, probably following wild game, and entered the American Continent.
Answer:
Prevent the spread of communism
Explanation:
After the second world war there was the itching for the then Sorviet Union to pervade the spread of communism into other continent. It was a foreign policy developed by the US containment to prevent this from happening. Communism has its idealogy in common ownership and state devoid of social status.