Scientists once thought that the peopling of the americas occurred pretty late, so around 13 thousand years ago. In this model, people moved through an interior route that opened up along the rocky mountains in between these two massive glaciers. And then they spread very, very quickly throughout north and south America.
Thousands of years ago, humans crossed a land bridge from Siberia into Alaska. They tried to move south, but a two-mile-high, coast-spanning ice wall stood between them and the rest of the continent.
How did they get past it?
Scholars have fought over that question for decades. But in her book, “Origin,” Jennifer Raff says breakthroughs in genetics have given scientists an entirely new understanding of how the Americas were peopled and what happened in the millennia that followed.
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