VOCABULARY
PREHISTORIC EVIDENCE
MIGRATION THEORIES
SCIENTISTS AND EVIDENCE
MAP READING
100

To thrive in your environment and your community.

What is flourish?

100

The U.S. state where the ancient footprints were found.

What is New Mexico?

100

The theory that says first peoples walked to North America. 

What is the Land Bridge Theory?

100

Scientists who study physical remains to answer questions about the past.

What are archaeologists?

100

This part of a map explains what the colors, symbols, and lines mean.

What is the key (or legend)?

200

To move from one location to another.

What is migrate?

200

The footprints turned into this material, which is why they lasted so long.

What is rock?

200

The theory that says first peoples arrived by water. 

What is the Coastal Migration Theory?

200

When studying first peoples, scientists look for evidence that turned into rock or was made from it. Footprints and fossils are turned into rock; spear points are made of this.

What is rock (stone)?

200

The continent where the oldest evidence of humans is found. 

What is Africa?

300

An explanation that is based on evidence.

What is a theory?

300

The geological period when these footprints were made. 

What is the last ice age?

300

The name of the land bridge that once connected Siberia to Alaska.

What is Beringia?

300

The reason it is so hard to find evidence of prehistoric humans.

What is that most evidence breaks down over time? (or, no written records exist)

300

On a map showing migration, these symbols are used to show the direction people moved.

What are arrows?

400

This word means "before history," referring to the time before written records.

What is prehistoric?

400

These two things scientists found at White Sands are evidence that first peoples lived alongside giant ice age animals.

What are footprints (human) and megafauna?

400

According to the Coastal Migration Theory, first peoples traveled along the coast of these two continents to reach the Americas.

What are Asia and North America?

400

The three steps of the Investigating Sources routine used in Lesson 4.

What are Observe, Read, and Connect?

400

The seven large landmasses shown on a world map.

What are the continents?

500

These four words share the same Latin root as "migrate": migrant, migration, immigrate, and this one, meaning a person who moves into a new country.

What is immigrant?

500

Scientists can tell the footprints are very old because they were found in different layers of this.

What is rock?

500

The reason Beringia is no longer visible today.

What is it is underwater? (sea levels rose after the ice age)

500

What separates a scientific theory from a hunch.

What is a body of evidence?

500

The four main directions shown on a compass rose.

What are north, south, east, and west?