No it does not
Beringia refers to the land bridge that once connected Asia and North America during periods of low sea levels. While the physical land bridge no longer exists due to rising sea levels, remnants of the Beringia region can still be found in the flora, fauna, and indigenous cultures of modern-day Alaska and northeastern Siberia.
bear-in-gee-a Beringia ;)
The rise and fall of global sea levels has exposed and submerged the bridging land mass called "Beringia" several times. It was last submerged after the last Ice Age, around six thousand years ago.
Because they Glaciers have melted and made Beringia invisible.
Beringia was 18 miles long and 1000 miles wide.
The Beringia connected Siberia and North America
That would be the Bering land bridge. It was around 1000 miles wide (north to south) at it's widest. It connected present-day Alaska. and eastern Siberia.
If you mean Beringia, the continental glaciers have retreated and the ice has melted, raising the sea level over the low land that made up the bridge.
The Pacific Ocean now exists where Beringia once was.
The Pacific Ocean now exists where Beringia once was.
Inuits