The Bering Land Bridge has been submerged since the last ice age. Will scientists ever study it?
livescience.com·1d
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It would currently be near impossible for divers to do successful underwater archaeological surveys of the Bering Strait, in part due to the cold water, strong currents, remoteness of the region and the lack of knowledge as to where ancient human sites might be. (Image credit: Justin Lewis via Getty Images)

The Bering Strait is a 52-mile-wide (85 kilometers), 165-foot-deep (50 meters) stretch of water between Alaska and Siberia. Today, it divides North America and Asia. However, during the coldest part of the last ice age between about 26,500 and 19,000 years ago, as the planet’s water became frozen in massive ice sheets, global sea levels were about 425 feet (130 m) lower. The resulting Bering Land Bridge let animals such as [mammoths…

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