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      • Twenty thousand years ago, ice sheets, some a mile thick, extended across North America as far south as modern-day Illinois. With so much of the world’s water captured in these massive ice sheets, global sea levels were much lower, and a land bridge connected Asia and North America across the Bering Strait.
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  2. This hypothesis proposes contact partly on the basis of perceived similarities between the flint tools of the Solutrean culture in modern-day France, Spain and Portugal (which thrived circa 20,000 to 15,000 BCE), and the Clovis culture of North America, which developed circa 9000 BCE.

  3. Like the cities of Mesoamerica, North American communities were sustained by long distance trading routes. The Mississippi River served as a particularly important trade artery, but all of the continent’s waterways were vital to transportation and communication.

    • How did North American people contact the outside world before 1492?1
    • How did North American people contact the outside world before 1492?2
    • How did North American people contact the outside world before 1492?3
    • How did North American people contact the outside world before 1492?4
    • How did North American people contact the outside world before 1492?5
  4. Apr 1, 2023 · Native American societies before 1492 were incredibly diverse, with thousands of distinct tribes, languages, and cultural practices spanning across North, Central, and South America. Their ways of life were influenced by regional factors, such as geography, climate, and available resources.

  5. May 6, 2021 · Pre-Colonial North America (also known as Pre-Columbian, Prehistoric, and Precontact) is the period between the migration of the Paleo-Indians to the region between 40,000-14,000 years ago and contact between indigenous tribes and European colonists in the 16th century CE which eradicated the Native American culture, replacing it with what ...

    • Joshua J. Mark
  6. By 1492 people had lived in the Western Hemisphere for tens of thousands of years. For much of this time it is believed that they experienced virtually no recorded, sustained contact with other parts of the world—Europe, Africa, or Asia.

    • Overview
    • Native North America
    • Core historical theme
    • Review question

    Summary of key events and concepts in North America prior to European contact.

    Before Europeans arrived in North America, Native American groups developed into distinct and complex societies in response to the unique environments they inhabited.

    Native societies in North America developed strong regional distinctions based on their environments.

    Impact of environment on Native settlement patterns: Geographical and environmental factors shaped the development of Native American societies, including their migration and settlement patterns throughout the United States. Some Native societies created innovations in agriculture, like irrigation, to help sustain permanent settlements.

    •How did environment and geography determine migration and hunting patterns for pre-Columbian societies?

  7. Jan 22, 2024 · In the Americas, “first contact” almost always refers to first contact between indigenous peoples and Europeans in the 16th and 17th centuries. In reality, of course, the Americas were populated by millions of people from thousands of culturally distinct communities.

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