Beringia
gale
views updated May 14 2018BERINGIA
Beringia is the land bridge thought to have existed over the Bering Strait, the waterway that separates Asia (Russia) from North America (Alaska). Scholars believe that a natural bridge was formed across the strait either by ice or by dropping sea levels that exposed land masses during the late ice age (known as the Pleistocene glacial epoch, which ended around 10,000 b.c.)
Asian peoples are believed to have migrated over Beringia as they pursued large game. They arrived in North America as early as 50,000 b.c. These people were the Paleo-Indians, the first inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere. Many American Indian groups that were encountered by the Europeans in the early 1500s were descendants of the migratory Paleo-Indians.
The Bering Strait, which connects the Arctic Ocean and the Bering Sea, is 53 miles (85 kilometers) across at its most narrow point. The first European to traverse the Bering Strait (in 1728) was Danish navigator Vitus Bering (1681–1741), from whom it takes its name. He had been employed by Russian Czar Peter the Great to determine whether Asia and North America were connected.
See also: Paleo-Indians
Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History
Beringia
oxford
views updated May 08 2018Beringia Area comprising the
Bering Strait and adjacent
Siberia and
Alaska. At various times in the late
Mesozoic and in the
Cenozoic, the strait was dry land and so provided an important
migration route for plants and animals between the Palaearctic and Neoarctic biogeographical regions.
A Dictionary of Earth Sciences AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY
Beringia
oxford
views updated Jun 08 2018Beringia An area comprising the
Bering Strait and adjacent
Siberia and
Alaska. At various times in the late
Mesozoic and
Cenozoic, the Strait was dry land and so provided for plants and animals an important
migration route between the Palaearctic and Nearctic biogeographical regions.
A Dictionary of Ecology MICHAEL ALLABY
Beringia
oxford
views updated May 17 2018Beringia An area comprising the
Bering Strait and adjacent
Siberia and
Alaska. At various times in the late
Mesozoic and
Cenozoic, the Strait was dry land and so provided for plants and animals an important
migration route between the Palaearctic and Nearctic biogeographical regions.
A Dictionary of Plant Sciences MICHAEL ALLABY