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Anonymous No. 16286022

Hominids have been in Eurasia for at least 1.8 million years, so it seems to me far-fetched that they never travelled across the Bering Strait until about 23k years ago, as is claimed.

American Indians have a phenotype that looks like a mix between East Asians and Caucasians, with some unique evolution after that. My guess is that Caucasoids and Mongoloids migrated into the Americas at various times over the course of the last 300k+ years.

What do you guys think?

Anonymous No. 16286084

>>16286022
>it seems to me far-fetched that they never travelled across the Bering Strait until about 23k years ago, as is claimed.
>What do you guys think?
I suspect so as well, but until there is physical evidence, it'll just be our own personal guess

Anonymous No. 16286387

they can travel it but can they survive it and leave archaeological remains?

Anonymous No. 16286391

why the fuck did canada allow the us to hive off most of its western coast?

Anonymous No. 16287298

bump

Anonymous No. 16287305

Only homo sapiens were adaptable enough to survive in such harsh regions during the height of the glacial maximums.

Anonymous No. 16287313

>>16286022
there were glaciers and huge man-eating bears blocking the path

Anonymous No. 16287333

>>16286022
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beringia

The Bering strait only had a land bridge fairly recently, around the 23k years ago date, which was the last glacial maximum. Given that fact I think your idea is pretty much dead in the water.

Anonymous No. 16287384

>>16286022
clovis first hypothesis is dead by now. there's a ton of sites in the 20-40k years range.
and then there's that mastodon that they found in california that has bones smashed with anvil and hammer stones for bone marrow extraction and is 130k years old.

Anonymous No. 16287489

>>16286391
Canadians are now pajeet cucks. What did you expect?

Anonymous No. 16287498

>>16286022
30k years on the low end

300k years on the high end

thats my guess

Anonymous No. 16288015

>>16286022
Paleontologists will eventually find some h. Erectus derivative's remains here. It's going to make a lot of people dance funny.

Anonymous No. 16288133

>>16286022
Humans arrived first to South America via boats.