I think this thread is getting bit off topic.
The US was discovered by white people they moved to the US that came from Europe at that time they where all white well they did bring black people in from Africa the two groups where white and black.
Now there is lot of Mexicans moving to the US and white people are now 60% and by 2050 may be 40% or 30%
Well white people in US do not look like those girls posted above or like that guy.
May be people from Spain, Italy or Greece may look like these girls or that guy but not white people in the US or Canada .
It could be that people who discovered the US and Canada came from Northern Europe well people who discovered South America and Central America came from Spain and Portugal.
The people who "discovered" America were not from Europe.
Actually not quit. America was discovered in WAVES----------------by both Asian and European people WAY WAY Before the idiotic crazy and lost Columbus stumbled upon the Americas with no clue where the hell he was at. You had the vikings and earlier europeans here far earlier than many give credit for. Some were able to come and live, others died out. This btw is the real reason why certain indian tribes have a cow when early bones are discovered and don't want dna done of them. (And Yes, I part white and part indian but truth is truth.)
"ST. LOUIS—The first humans to spread across North America may have been seal hunters from France and Spain.
This runs counter to the long-held belief that the first human entry into the Americas was a crossing of a land-ice bridge that spanned the Bering Strait about 13,500 years ago.
The new thinking was outlined here Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Recent studies have suggested that the glaciers that helped form the bridge connecting Siberia and Alaska began receding around 17,000 to 13,000 years ago, leaving very little chance that people walked from one continent to the other.
Also, when archaeologist Dennis Stanford of the Smithsonian Institution places American spearheads, called Clovis points, side-by-side with Siberian points, he sees a divergence of many characteristics.
Instead, Stanford said today, Clovis points match up much closer with Solutrean style tools, which researchers date to about 19,000 years ago. This suggests that the American people making Clovis points made Solutrean points before that.
There’s just one problem with this hypothesis—Solutrean toolmakers lived in France and Spain. Scientists know of no land-ice bridge that spanned that entire gap.
The lost hunting party
Stanford has an idea for how humans crossed the Atlantic, though—boats. Art from that era indicates that Solutrean populations in northern Spain were hunting marine animals, such as seals, walrus, and tuna.
They may have even made their way into the floating ice chunks that unite immense harp seal populations in Canada and Europe each year. Four million seals, Stanford said, would look like a pretty good meal to hungry European hunters, who might have ventured into the ice flows much the same way that the Inuit in Alaska and Greenland do today.
Inuit use large, open hunting boats constructed from animal skins for longer trips or big hunts. These boats, called umiaq, can hold a dozen adults, as well as several children, dead seals or walruses, and even dog-sled teams. Inuit have been building these boats for thousands of years, and Stanford believes that Solutrean people may have used a similar design."
From LiveScience