Are there any animals that resided where North America is now when Earth was Pangea that are ancestors of animals still in North America Today?
For example: Bison aren't native because they crossed over the land bridge with the humans to North America.
2007-03-17
02:24:57
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10 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Earth Sciences & Geology
If you don't know the answer and are just making **** up please don't answer, it's frustrating.
Wolves, horses, bears and camels all came here from Eurasia. The wolves followed the game animals that crossed over the land bridge just like the humans.
2007-03-17
04:02:52 ·
update #1
OMG. Please only answer if you have scientific backing and evidence. No land bridge? How did humans get to North America then? Especially since the earliest human fossils only dated back to AFTER Homo Sapiens developed in Africa.
White man? What the hell does this have to DO WITH ANYTHING? There's no propaganda, just carbon dating.
I don't know why it's so hard to get an educated, intelligent, helpful answer on here.
THANK YOU to the first poster for the only useful answer yet.
2007-03-18
02:53:27 ·
update #2
You are getting frustrated because your history is wrong.
The land bridge theory is just that a THEORY. There is little scientific proof to back it up. There is more scientific proof against the theory than there is for it. Scientists, scholars, and common citizens just believe in it today on blind faith.
Read "Red Earth White Lies" for more information.
2007-03-17 09:55:04
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answer #1
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answered by RedPower Woman 6
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RedPower Woman is 100% correct. The whole "Land Bridge" theory is pure White Man's propaganda to try and justify the stealing of our lands. The Great Father put all the animals here for us to use so that we could survive. The only "non" native animals are the domesticated ones brought over by the Europeans.
2007-03-17 18:06:57
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answer #2
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answered by bigjfry 4
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If it was all once one land...and all the animals today are descended from those animals...makes sense for all countries then that the answer could be both yes and no.
If someone isn't currently concerned with how people 'got here,' then it's about how animals 'got here'... Do people for some reason think this continent was originally empty of all life? Weird.
2007-03-17 10:41:22
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answer #3
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answered by Indigo 7
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Turkey
2007-03-17 02:35:20
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Bears,coyotes,wolves,liberals.
2007-03-17 02:36:10
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Turkeys
2007-03-17 02:35:34
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answer #6
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answered by John S 6
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Yes bison are native, they are not the Pleistocene Bison antiquus megafauna that originally migrated, they evolved in the new world as did mountain lions, llamas, alpacas, raccoons, capybara, all new world primates, antelope, and too many others to name.
2007-03-17 03:37:03
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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One is the Native Brook Trout!! It still can be found in the streams!!! It generally doesn't get longer than Seven(7*) inches!!
2007-03-17 02:32:42
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answer #8
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answered by dca2003311@yahoo.com 7
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Ancestors of grizzly bears, horses, camels. Lots and lots more.
2007-03-17 02:34:06
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answer #9
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answered by Joan H 6
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ooh good one
2007-03-17 02:33:18
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answer #10
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answered by Noor al Haqiqa 6
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