@book{doi105962bhltitle6815,
    author = "Coxe, William",
    title = "Account of the Russian discoveries between Asia and America. To which are added the conquest of Siberia, and the history of the transactions and commerce between Russia and China",
    year = "1780",
    abstract = "\&quot;Some copies dated 1803.\&lt;br\&gt;'60 copies [of the 4th cd.] issued on large paper': - Streeter.\&quot; -- Strathern, G. M., \& Edwards, M. H. (1970). Navigations, traffiques \& discoveries, 1774-1848: A guide to publications relating to the area now British Columbia. Victoria, BC: University of Victoria, p. 69.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.6815",
    doi = "10.5962/bhl.title.6815",
    openalex = "W1482197647"
}

@article{griffin1960some,
    author = "Griffin, James B.",
    title = "Some Prehistoric Connections between Siberia and America",
    year = "1960",
    journal = "Science",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1126/science.131.3403.801",
    doi = "10.1126/science.131.3403.801",
    number = "3403",
    openalex = "W2010265590",
    pages = "801-812",
    volume = "131",
    references = "doi101126science12933621519, doi102307276435, doi102307276742, doi102307276780, doi102307277602"
}

@book{hasler1971orientation1,
    author = "Hasler, A. D",
    title = "Orientation and Fish Migration, in Hoar, W. S., and Randall, D. J., eds., Fish Physiology",
    year = "1971",
    publisher = "New York, Academic Press, v. VI, p. 429-510",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Hasler, A. D., 1971, Orientation and Fish Migration, in Hoar, W. S., and Randall, D. J., eds., Fish Physiology: New York, Academic Press, v. VI, p. 429-510.}"
}

@misc{kielanjaworowska1974migrations3,
    author = "Kielan-Jaworowska, Z",
    title = "Migrations of the multituberculata and the Late Cretaceous connections between Asia and North America",
    year = "1974",
    howpublished = "Annals of the South African Museum, v. 64, p. 231-243",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Kielan-Jaworowska, Z., 1974, Migrations of the multituberculata and the Late Cretaceous connections between Asia and North America: Annals of the South African Museum, v. 64, p. 231-243.}"
}

@incollection{hotton1980an2,
    author = "Hotton, N",
    editor = "Thomas, D. K. and Olson, E. C.",
    title = "An Alternative to Dinosaur Endothermy: The Happy Wanderers",
    year = "1980",
    booktitle = "A Cold Look at the Warm Blooded Dinosaurs",
    publisher = "Washington, D.C., American Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 311-350",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Hotton, N., 1980, An Alternative to Dinosaur Endothermy: The Happy Wanderers, in Thomas, D. K., and Olson, E. C., eds., A Cold Look at the Warm Blooded Dinosaurs: Washington, D.C., American Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 311-350.}"
}

@article{paul1988physiological4,
    author = "Paul, G. S",
    title = "Physiological, migratorial, climatological, geophysical, survival and evolutionary implications of polar dinosaurs",
    year = "1988",
    journal = "Journal of Paleontology, v. 62, p. 640-652",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Paul, G. S., 1988, Physiological, migratorial, climatological, geophysical, survival and evolutionary implications of polar dinosaurs: Journal of Paleontology, v. 62, p. 640-652.}"
}

@article{doi101002evan1360010505,
    author = "Meltzer, David J.",
    title = "Pleistocene peopling of the Americas",
    year = "1993",
    journal = "Evolutionary Anthropology Issues News and Reviews",
    abstract = "Abstract Our species colonized North and South America last of all the major land masses, thereby ending the spread that began a million years earlier when ancestral members of the genus Homo first ventured out of Africa. But who were the first Americans? When did they arrive? Did they come in one migration or many? How quickly and by what adaptive strategies did they move across the environmentally diverse and trackless New World? How do they relate to contemporary native Americans? We have plenty of answers to these questions. Unfortunately, we can't agree which ones are right. This much is certain: the first Americans were Homo sapiens who came from northeast Asia via the Bering Straits (Fig. 1). They may have walked from Siberia to Alaska across Beringia, the land bridge formed when vast Pleistocene glaciers froze 5\% of the world's water, 1 lowering global sea levels and exposing the shallow continental shelf between Asia and America. These hunter‐gatherers were present throughout the Americas by 11,500 years ago, in time to witness the climatic and ecological changes, including the extinction of thirty‐five genera of megafauna, that signalled the end of the Pleistocene. Beyond those bare facts there is controversy. Here, then, is a brief summary of the state of the argument over the peopling of the Americas.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1002/evan.1360010505",
    doi = "10.1002/evan.1360010505",
    openalex = "W2117934867",
    references = "doi101525aa198789102a00020"
}

@article{shabalina2010connections,
    author = "Shabalina, Svetlana A. and Spiridonov, Alexey N. and Spiridonov, Nikolay A. and Koonin, Eugene V.",
    title = "Connections between Alternative Transcription and Alternative Splicing in Mammals",
    year = "2010",
    journal = "Genome Biology and Evolution",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evq058",
    doi = "10.1093/gbe/evq058",
    openalex = "W2160479219",
    pages = "791-799",
    volume = "2",
    references = "doi101016jcell200606023, doi101038280339a0, doi101038416499a, doi101038nature07002, doi101038nature07509, doi101038ng259, doi101093nargkh036, doi101126science1160342, doi101186gb200233reviews0004, doi101186gb200344r28"
}

@article{logemann2013europe,
    author = "Logemann, Jan",
    title = "Europe – Migration – Identity: Connections between migration experiences and Europeanness",
    year = "2013",
    journal = "National Identities",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1080/14608944.2012.733150",
    doi = "10.1080/14608944.2012.733150",
    number = "1",
    openalex = "W2073464725",
    pages = "1-8",
    volume = "15",
    references = "doi1010029780470712818, doi1010029780470754658, doi1010800141987019799993248, doi1010801369183x2010491996, doi1023072546771, doi105860choice285383, doi105860choice310472, doi105860choice450503, doi105860choice475723, openalexw2131271752"
}

@article{doi101111jse12222,
    author = "Wen, Jun and Nie, Ze‐Long and Ickert‐Bond, Stefanie M.",
    title = "Intercontinental disjunctions between eastern Asia and western North America in vascular plants highlight the biogeographic importance of the Bering land bridge from late Cretaceous to Neogene",
    year = "2016",
    journal = "Journal of Systematics and Evolution",
    abstract = "Abstract This review shows a close biogeographic connection between eastern Asia and western North America from the late Cretaceous to the late Neogene in major lineages of vascular plants (flowering plants, gymnosperms, ferns and lycophytes). Of the eastern Asian–North American disjuncts, conifers exhibit a high proportion of disjuncts between eastern Asia and western North America. Several lineages of ferns also show a recent disjunct pattern in the two areas. In flowering plants, the pattern is commonly shown in temperate elements between northeastern Asia and northwestern North America, as well as elements of the relict boreotropical and Neogene mesophytic and coniferous floras. The many cases of intercontinental biogeographic disjunctions between eastern Asia and western North America in plants supported by recent phylogenetic analyses highlight the importance of the Bering land bridge and/or the plant migrations across the Beringian region from the late Cretaceous to the late Neogene, especially during the Miocene. The Beringian region has permitted the filtering and migration of certain plant taxa since the Pliocene after the opening of the Bering Strait, as many conspecific taxa or closely related species occur on both sides of Beringia.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1111/jse.12222",
    doi = "10.1111/jse.12222",
    openalex = "W2514500989",
    references = "doi101007bf02872570, doi101126science12933621519, doi1023072992083"
}

@article{doi101038s41467020165572,
    author = "Ning, Chao and Li, Tianjiao and Wang, Ke and Zhang, Fan and Li, Tao and Wu, Xiyan and Gao, Shizhu and Zhang, Quanchao and Hai, Zhang and Hudson, Mark and Dong, Guanghui and Wu, Sihao and Fang, Yanming and Liu, Chen and Feng, Chunyan and Li, Wei and Han, Tao and Li, Ruo and Wei, Jian and Zhu, Yonggang and Zhou, Yawei and Wang, Chuan‐Chao and Fan, Shengying and Xiong, Zenglong and Sun, Zhouyong and Ye, Maolin and Sun, Lei and Wu, Xiaohong and Liang, Fawei and Cao, Yanpeng and Wei, Xingtao and Zhu, Hong and Zhou, Hui and Krause, Johannes and Robbeets, Martine and Jeong, Choongwon and Cui, Yinqiu",
    title = "Ancient genomes from northern China suggest links between subsistence changes and human migration",
    year = "2020",
    journal = "Nature Communications",
    abstract = "Northern China harbored the world's earliest complex societies based on millet farming, in two major centers in the Yellow (YR) and West Liao (WLR) River basins. Until now, their genetic histories have remained largely unknown. Here we present 55 ancient genomes dating to 7500-1700 BP from the YR, WLR, and Amur River (AR) regions. Contrary to the genetic stability in the AR, the YR and WLR genetic profiles substantially changed over time. The YR populations show a monotonic increase over time in their genetic affinity with present-day southern Chinese and Southeast Asians. In the WLR, intensification of farming in the Late Neolithic is correlated with increased YR affinity while the inclusion of a pastoral economy in the Bronze Age was correlated with increased AR affinity. Our results suggest a link between changes in subsistence strategy and human migration, and fuel the debate about archaeolinguistic signatures of past human migration.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16557-2",
    doi = "10.1038/s41467-020-16557-2",
    openalex = "W3031303512",
    references = "doi101038s415860191279z"
}

@misc{vajda2022midholocene,
    author = "Vajda, Edward and Fortescue, Michael",
    title = "Mid-Holocene Language Connections between Asia and North America",
    year = "2022",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004436824",
    doi = "10.1163/9789004436824"
}

@article{berge2024,
    author = "Berge, Anna",
    title = ": Mid-Holocene Language Connections between Asia and North America",
    year = "2024",
    journal = "International Journal of American Linguistics",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1086/727525",
    doi = "10.1086/727525",
    number = "1",
    pages = "130-132",
    volume = "90"
}

@incollection{bowden2024connections,
    author = "Bowden, Caroline and Mangion, Carmen M. and Questier, Michael and Major, Emma and Bowden, Caroline",
    title = "Connections Between Europe and America Before Independence",
    year = "2024",
    booktitle = "English Convents in Exile, 1600-1800, Part II, vol 6",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003553502-27",
    doi = "10.4324/9781003553502-27",
    openalex = "W4400986486",
    pages = "143-143"
}

@incollection{erdal2024a,
    author = "Erdal, Marta Bivand and Abraham, Anu",
    title = "A methodologically oriented interrogation of connections between migration and social mobility in South Asia",
    year = "2024",
    booktitle = "South Asia Migration Report 2024",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003521228-3",
    doi = "10.4324/9781003521228-3",
    openalex = "W4404850357",
    pages = "35-55"
}

@article{kari2024,
    author = "Kari, James",
    title = ": Mid-Holocene Language Connections between Asia and North America",
    year = "2024",
    journal = "International Journal of American Linguistics",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1086/727526",
    doi = "10.1086/727526",
    number = "1",
    pages = "132-137",
    volume = "90"
}

@article{potter2024,
    author = "Potter, Ben A.",
    title = ": Mid-Holocene Language Connections between Asia and North America",
    year = "2024",
    journal = "International Journal of American Linguistics",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1086/727520",
    doi = "10.1086/727520",
    number = "1",
    pages = "125-130",
    volume = "90"
}
