Beringia

beh-RIN-jee-uh

The broad, dry land bridge that connected Asia and North America during the Pleistocene, when sea levels dropped hundreds of feet during glacial periods. Not the narrow isthmus most people imagine — Beringia was a thousand miles wide, a grassland steppe roamed by mammoths, horses, and the first Americans walking east.
Etymology
Named for Vitus Bering, the Danish navigator who sailed the strait in 1728.
 ice/snow geology terrain
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