Ancient Siberian DNA upends our understanding of Native American migration

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win
Family trees provide a clear example of how DNA evolves as it passes down generations. But it also reveals clues to the complicated history of human migration. Take the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. DNA evidence suggests groups of Asians migrated to Beringia, the land and maritime region between Russia and North America, around 20,000 years ago (maybe well before) and then gradually made their way to the Americas in waves.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...A16iWui?cvid=3fcb60c95fe848c1a0688a52c6b0f5ad
 
Makes sense that these Paleolithic peoples would have traveled back and forth between Siberia and North America.
 
Family trees provide a clear example of how DNA evolves as it passes down generations. But it also reveals clues to the complicated history of human migration. Take the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. DNA evidence suggests groups of Asians migrated to Beringia, the land and maritime region between Russia and North America, around 20,000 years ago (maybe well before) and then gradually made their way to the Americas in waves.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...A16iWui?cvid=3fcb60c95fe848c1a0688a52c6b0f5ad

Echoes of a Prehistoric Horror

They didn't "migrate." As their history and behavior even today proves, they were bandits on the run from civilized Asians. That goes for all No Man's Lands: the frozen North, the deserts, the jungles, and the mountains. A hideout is not a homeland. The Indigians have no more right to be called "nations" than ISIS did.
 
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