Ice age humans crossing over the Bering Land Bridge likely experienced icy conditions like those seen here at Lake Baikal in Siberia. (Image credit: WanRu Chen via Getty Images)

Humans first arrived in North America at least 15,500 years ago. Exactly how they got there, however, constitutes one of the longest-standing debates in archaeology. 

For decades, scientists assumed that people first arrived in the Americas by walking south from the now-flooded land bridge in the Bering Strait that once connected Russia to Alaska when sea levels were lower during the last ice age. But recent evidence suggests that these people were not the first to set foot on the continent. 



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