Peninsula of Seward

The peninsula of Seward is broad a Péninsule of the West coast of the Alaska. It projects approximately 320 Kilomètres in the Bering Sea.

The peninsula of Seward was in the past part of the Pont of ground of Bering, connecting the Siberia to the Alaska during the Glacial period of the Pléistocène. This ground bridge facilitated the Migration Humains, as well as the animal species of Asia in North America. The archaeological discoveries in all the peninsula of Seward prove that the Inuit of Inupiat had lived in the area for thousands of years.

Demography

the Communities on the Peninsula of Seward, with the evaluations of population of state in 2005:

Other places on the Péninsule include the Ville S of Council, Solomon, Candle, Haycock and Taylor.

The Péninsule was named according to the name of William H. Seward, the Secrétaire of the the United States, which negotiated the purchase of the Alaska to the Russia, in 1867.

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