Dictionary Definition
neanderthal adj
1 ill-mannered and coarse and contemptible in
behavior or appearance; "was boorish and insensitive"; "the loutish
manners of a bully"; "her stupid oafish husband"; "aristocratic
contempt for the swinish multitude" [syn: boorish, loutish, neandertal, oafish, swinish]
2 relating to or belonging to or resembling
Neanderthal man; "Neanderthal skull" [syn: Neanderthalian, Neandertal] n : extinct
robust human of Middle Paleolithic in Europe and western Asia [syn:
Neandertal
man, Neanderthal
man, Neandertal,
Homo sapiens neanderthalensis]
Extensive Definition
The Neanderthal (, also with /neɪ-/, and /-tɑːl/), or
Neandertal, was a species of the Homo genus
(Homo neanderthalensis or Homo sapiens neanderthalensis'') which
inhabited Europe and parts of
western and central
Asia. The first proto-Neanderthal traits appeared in Europe as
early as 350-500 thousand years ago. By 130,000 years ago, complete
Neanderthal characteristics had appeared and by 50,000 years ago,
Neanderthals disappeared from Asia, although they did not reach
extinction in Europe until 30,000 years ago. No Neanderthal
skeletons of younger dating have been found, though it has been
suggested that Neanderthals survived longer in Southern Iberia.
Neanderthal may have coexisted with modern humans up to 15,000
years after Homo sapiens
had migrated into Europe. It is believed that the population of
Neanderthals was never much more than 10,000 individuals.
Neanderthals had many adaptations to a cold
climate: short, robust
builds, and rather large noses — traits selected
by nature in cold climates. Their cranial
capacity was larger than modern humans, indicating that their
brains may have been larger. The brain size is related to a
mutation in the
microcephalin
gene, which is also seen in the Homo sapiens genetic pool. On
average, the height of Neanderthals was comparable to
contemporaneous homo sapiens. Neanderthal males stood about 165–68
cm tall (about 5'5") and were heavily built with robust bone
structure. Females stood about 152–56 cm tall (about 5'1").
The characteristic style of stone tools
in the Middle
Paleolithic is called the Mousterian
culture, after a prominent archaeological site where the tools were
first found. The Mousterian culture is typified by the wide use of
the Levallois
technique. Mousterian tools were often produced using soft
hammer percussion, with hammers made of materials like bones,
antlers, and wood, rather than hard hammer percussion, using
stone
hammers. Near the end of the time of the Neanderthals, they created
the Châtelperronian
tool style, considered more advanced than that of the Mousterian.
They either invented the Châtelperronian themselves or borrowed
elements from the incoming modern humans who are thought to have
created the Aurignacian.
Etymology and classification
The Neandertal is a small valley of the river Düssel in the German Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia, located about west of Düsseldorf, the capital city of North Rhine-Westphalia. Neanderthal is now spelled two ways: the old spelling of the German word Thal, meaning "valley or dale", was changed to Tal in 1901, but the former spelling is often retained in English and always in scientific names, while the modern spelling is used in German while referring to the valley itself.The Neander Valley
was named after theologian Joachim
Neander, who lived nearby in Düsseldorf
in the late seventeenth century. In turn, Neanderthals were named
after "Neander Valley", where the first Neanderthal remains were
found. The term Neanderthal Man was coined in 1863 by Anglo-Irish
geologist William
King.
The original German pronunciation (regardless of
spelling) is with the sound /t/. (See German
phonology.) In English the term is commonly anglicised to /θ/
(th as in thin), though scientists frequently use /t/. "Neander" is
a classicized form of the common German surname Neumann.
For some time, professionals debated whether
Neanderthals should be classified as Homo neanderthalensis or as
Homo sapiens neanderthalensis, the latter placing Neanderthals as a
subspecies of
Homo
sapiens. Recent genetic simulations suggested that 5% of human
DNA can only be accounted for by assuming a substantial
contribution of Neanderthaler to the European gene pool of up to
25%. Additionally, morphological studies using latest techniques
support that Homo neanderthalensis is a separate species and not a
subspecies. Some scientists, for example University
of Michigan Professor Milford
Wolpoff, claim that fossil evidence suggests that the
two species interbred.
This would support the argument that the two were the same
biological species.
Others, for example University
of Cambridge Professor Paul Mellars, say "no evidence has been
found of cultural interaction" and evidence from mitochondrial
DNA studies have been interpreted as evidence that
Neanderthals were not a subspecies of H. sapiens.
Discovery
Neanderthal skulls were first discovered in Engis, Belgium (1829) and in Forbes' Quarry, Gibraltar (1848), both prior to the "original" discovery in a limestone quarry of the Neander Valley in Erkrath near Düsseldorf in August, 1856, three years before Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published.The type
specimen, dubbed Neanderthal
1, consisted of a skull cap, two femora, three bones from the right
arm, two from the left arm, part of the left ilium, fragments of a scapula, and ribs. The workers
who recovered this material originally thought it to be the remains
of a bear. They gave the
material to amateur naturalist Johann
Carl Fuhlrott, who turned the fossils over to anatomist
Hermann Schaaffhausen. The discovery was jointly announced in
1857.
The original Neanderthal discovery is now
considered the beginning of paleoanthropology.
These and other discoveries led to the idea that these remains were
from ancient Europeans who had
played an important role in modern human
origins. The bones of over 400 Neanderthals have been found
since.
Notable fossils
- La Ferrassie 1: A fossilized skull discovered in La Ferrassie, France by R. Capitan in 1909. It is estimated to be 70,000 years old. Its characteristics include a large occipital bun, low-vaulted cranium and heavily worn teeth.
- Shanidar 1: Found in the Zagros Mountains in northern Iraq; a total of nine skeletons found believed to have lived in the Middle Paleolithic Period. One of the nine remains had an amputated arm. This is significant due to the fact that it shows that stone tools were present in that era. Also, another Neanderthal had been buried with flowers, showing that some type of burial ceremony may have occurred.
- La Chappelle-aux-Saints 1: Called the Old Man, a fossilized skull discovered in La Chapelle-aux-Saints, France by A. and J. Bouyssonie, and L. Bardon in 1908. Characteristics include a low vaulted cranium and large browridge typical of Neanderthals. Estimated to be about 60,000 years old, the specimen was severely arthritic and had lost all his teeth, with evidence of healing. For him to have lived on would have required that someone process his food for him, one of the earliest examples of Neanderthal altruism (similar to Shanidar I.)
- Le Moustier: A fossilized skull, discovered in 1909, at the archeological site in Peyzac-le-Moustier, Dordogne, France. The Mousterian tool culture is named after Le Moustier. The skull, estimated to be less than 45,000 years old, includes a large nasal cavity and a somewhat less developed brow ridge and occipital bun as might be expected in a juvenile.
- Neanderthal 1: Initial Neanderthal specimen found during an archaeology dig in August 1856. Discovered in a limestone quarry at the Feldhofer grotto in Neanderthal, Germany. The find consisted of a skull cap, two femora, the three right arm bones, two of the left arm bones, ilium, and fragments of a scapula and ribs.
- Kebara 2
Anatomy
Compared to modern humans, Neanderthals were similar in height but with more robust bodies, and had distinct morphological features, especially of the cranium, which gradually accumulated more derived aspects, particularly in certain relatively isolated geographic regions. Evidence suggests that they were much stronger than modern humans; their relatively robust stature is thought to be an adaptation to the cold climate of Europe during the Pleistocene epoch.A 2007 study confirmed that some Neanderthals had
red hair and pale skin
color; however, the mutation in the MC1R
gene arose independently of the mutation which causes a similar
pigmentation pattern in modern humans.
Distinguishing physical traits
The following is a list of physical traits which distinguish Neanderthals from modern humans; however, not all of them can be used to distinguish specific Neanderthal populations, from various geographic areas or periods of evolution, from other extinct humans. Also, many of these traits occasionally manifest in modern humans, particularly among certain ethnic groups. Nothing is known about the shape of soft parts such as eyes, ears, and lips of Neanderthals.- Cranial
- Suprainiac fossa, a groove above the inion
- Occipital bun, a protuberance of the occipital bone which looks like a hair knot
- Projecting mid-face
- Low, flat, elongated skull
- A flat basicraniumhttp://www.pajamacore.org/writings/origins.phphttp://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1200/is_n15_v141/ai_12140517
- Supraorbital torus, a prominent, trabecular (spongy) browridge
- 1200-1750 cm³ skull capacity (10% greater than modern human average)
- Lack of a protruding chin (mental protuberance; although later specimens possess a slight protuberance)
- Crest on the mastoid process behind the ear opening
- No groove on canine teeth
- A retromolar space posterior to the third molar
- Bony projections on the sides of the nasal opening
- Distinctive shape of the bony labyrinth in the ear
- Larger mental foramen in mandible for facial blood supply
- Broad, projecting nose
- Sub-cranial
- Considerably more robust
- Large round finger tips
- Barrel-shaped rib cage
- Large kneecaps
- Long collar bones
- Short, bowed shoulder blades
- Thick, bowed shaft of the thigh bones
- Short shinbones and calf bones
- Long, gracile pelvic pubis (superior pubic ramus)
- Bowed Femur
Language
seealso Origin of languageThe idea that Neanderthals lacked complex
language was
widespread, despite concerns about the accuracy of reconstructions
of the Neanderthal vocal tract, until 1983, when a Neanderthal
hyoid
bone was found at the Kebara Cave
in Israel. The hyoid is a small bone which connects the musculature
of the tongue and the
larynx, and by bracing
these structures against each other, allows a wider range of tongue
and laryngeal movements than would otherwise be possible. The
presence of this bone implies that speech was anatomically
possible. The bone which was found is virtually identical to that
of modern humans.
The morphology of the outer and middle ear of
Neanderthal ancestors, Homo
heidelbergensis, found in Spain, suggests they had an auditory
sensitivity similar to modern humans and very different from
chimpanzees. They were probably able to differentiate between many
different sounds.
Neurological evidence for potential speech in
neanderthalensis exists in the form of the hypoglossal
canal. The canal of neanderthalensis is the same size or larger
than in modern humans, which are significantly larger than the
canal of australopithecines
and modern chimpanzees. The canal
carries the hypoglossal nerve, which controls the muscles of the
tongue. This indicates that neanderthalensis had vocal capabilities
similar to modern humans. A research team from the
University of California, Berkeley, led by David DeGusta,
suggests that the size of the hypoglossal canal is not an indicator
of speech. His team's research, which shows no correlation between
canal size and speech potential, shows there are a number of extant
non-human primates and fossilized australopithecines which have
equal or larger hypoglossal canal.
Another anatomical difference between
Neanderthals and Modern humans is their lack of a mental
protuberance (the point at the tip of the chin). This may be
relevant to speech as the mentalis muscle, one of the muscles which
move the lower lip, is attached to the tip of the chin. While some
Neanderthal individuals do possess a mental protuberance, their
chins never show the inverted T-shape of modern humans. In
contrast, some Neanderthal individuals show inferior lateral mental
tubercles (little bumps at the side of the chin). A recent
extraction of DNA from Neanderthal bones indicates that
Neanderthals had the same version of the FOXP2 gene as modern
humans. This gene is known to play a role in human language.
Steven
Mithen (2006) proposes that the Neanderthals had an elaborate
proto-linguistic
system of communication which was more musical
than modern human language, and which predated the separation of
language and music into two separate modes of
cognition.
Tools
Neanderthal and Middle Paleolithic archaeological sites show a smaller and different toolkit than those which have been found in Upper Paleolithic sites, which were perhaps occupied by modern humans which superseded them. Fossil evidence indicating who may have made the tools found in Early Upper Paleolithic sites is still missing.Neanderthals are thought to have used tools of
the Mousterian class, which were often produced using soft hammer
percussion, with hammers made of materials like bones, antlers, and
wood, rather than hard hammer percussion, using stone hammers. A
result of this is that their bone industry was relatively simple.
However, there is good evidence that they routinely constructed a
variety of stone implements. Neanderthal (Mousterian)
tools most often consisted of sophisticated stone-flakes,
task-specific hand axes, and
spears. Many of these
tools were very sharp. There is also good evidence that they used a
lot of wood, objects which are unlikely to have been preserved
until today.
Also, while they had weapons, whether they had
implements which were used as projectile weapons is
controversial. They had spears, made of long wooden shafts
with spearheads firmly attached, but they are thought by some to
have been thrusting spears. Still, a Levallois point
embedded in a vertebra shows an angle of impact suggesting that it
entered by a "parabolic trajectory" suggesting that it was the tip
of a projectile. Moreover, a number of 400,000 year old wooden
projectile spears were found at Schöningen
in northern Germany. These are thought to have been made by the
Neanderthal's ancestors, Homo erectus
or Homo
heidelbergensis. Generally, projectile weapons are more
commonly associated with H. sapiens. The lack of projectile
weaponry is an indication of different sustenance methods, rather
than inferior technology or abilities. The situation is identical
to that of native New Zealand Maori - modern Homo sapiens, who also
rarely threw objects, but used spears and clubs instead.
Although much has been made of the Neanderthal's
burial of their dead,
their burials were less elaborate than those of anatomically modern
humans. The interpretation of the Shanidar IV
burials as including flowers, and therefore being a
form of ritual burial,
has been questioned. On the other hand, five of the six flower
pollens found with Shanidar IV are known to have had 'traditional'
medical uses, even among relatively recent 'modern' populations. In
some cases Neanderthal burials include grave goods,
such as bison and
aurochs bones, tools,
and the pigment ochre.
Neanderthals also performed many sophisticated
tasks which are normally associated only with humans. For example,
it is known that they controlled fire, constructed complex shelters,
and skinned animals. A trap excavated at La
Cotte de St Brelade in Jersey gives
testament to their intelligence and success as hunters .
Particularly intriguing is a hollowed-out bear
femur with holes which may
have been deliberately bored into it. This bone was found in
western Slovenia in 1995,
near a Mousterian fireplace, but its significance is still a matter
of dispute. Some paleoanthropologists have hypothesized that it was
a flute, while others believe it was created by accident through
the chomping action of another bear. See: Divje
Babe.
Habitat and range
The fate of the Neanderthals
Possible theories for the fate of Neanderthals include the following:- Neanderthals evolved to a separate species which became extinct (see Neanderthal extinction hypotheses) and were replaced by early modern humans traveling from Africa.
- Neanderthals was a contemporary subspecies which incidentally bred with Homo sapiens and disappeared through absorption (see Neanderthal interaction with Cro-Magnons)
- Neanderthals never split from Homo sapiens and most of their populations transformed into anatomically modern humans between 50-30 kya (see Multiregional origin of modern humans).
According to the oldest view (#1), modern humans
(Homo
sapiens) began replacing Neanderthals around 45,000 years ago,
as the Cro-Magnon
people appeared in Europe, pushing
populations of Neanderthals into regional pockets, where they held
on for thousands of years, such as modern-day Croatia, Iberia,
and the Crimean
peninsula. The last known population was located around a
cave
system on the remote south-facing coast of Gibraltar, from
30,000 to 24,000 years ago.
The validity of such an extensive period of
cornered Neanderthal groups is recently questioned. There is no
longer certainty regarding the identity of the humans who produced
the Aurignacian
culture, even though the presumed westward spread of anatomically
modern humans (AMHs) across Europe is still based on the
controversial first dates of the Aurignacian. Currently, the oldest
European anatomically modern Homo sapiens is represented by a
robust modern human mandible discovered at Pestera cu Oase
(south-west Romania), dated to 34–36 kya (thousand years ago).
Human skeletal remains from the German site of Vogelherd, so far
regarded the best association between anatomically modern Homo
sapiens and Aurignacian
culture, were revealed to represent intrusive Neolithic burials
into the Aurignacian levels and subsequently all the key Vogelherd
fossils are now dated to 3.9–5.0 thousand years ago instead. As for
now, the expansion of the first anatomically modern humans into
Europe can't be located by diagnostic and well-dated anatomically
modern human fossils "west of the Iron Gates of the Danube" before
32 kya. Moreover, researchers have recently have found in Pestera
Muierii, Romania, remains of European humans from 30 kya who
possessed mostly diagnostic "modern" anatomical features, but also
had distinct Neanderthal features not present in ancestral modern
humans in Africa, including a large bulge at the back of the skull,
a more prominent projection around the elbow joint, and a narrow
socket at the shoulder joint. Analysis of one skeleton's shoulder
showed that these humans, like Neanderthal, did not have the full
capability for throwing spears.
Consequently, the exact nature of biological and
cultural interactions between Neanderthals and other human groups
between 50 and 30 thousand years ago is currently hotly contested.
A new proposal resolves the issue by taking the Gravettians rather
than the Aurignacians as the anatomically modern humans which
contributed to the post-30 kya Eurasian genetic pool.
Correspondingly, the human skull fragment found at the Elbe River
bank at Hahnöfersand near Hamburg was once radiocarbon dated to
36,000 years ago and seen as possible evidence for the intermixing
of Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans. It is now dated to
the more recent Mesolithic.
Modern human findings in Abrigo do Lagar Velho,
Portugal
of 24,500 years ago, allegedly featuring Neanderthal admixtures,
have been published. The paleontological analysis of modern human
emergence in Europe has been shifting from considerations of the
Neanderthals to assessments of the biology and chronology of the
earliest modern humans in western Eurasia. This focus, involving
morphologically modern humans before 28,000 years ago shows
accumulating evidence that they present a variable mosaic of
derived modern human, archaic human, and Neanderthal
features.
On the other hand, a mtDNA analysis has
shown no evidence for Neanderthal contributions to the gene pool of
modern humans. The authors of the study concede that this does not
exclude Neanderthal contributions of other genes. They nevertheless
argue that other genetic and morphological data also suggest little
or no Neanderthal contribution.
Genome
see Neanderthal Genome Project While previous investigations concentrated on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) — which, due to strictly matrilineal inheritance and subsequent vulnerability to genetic drift, is of limited value to disprove interbreeding — more recent investigations have access to growing strings of deciphered nuclear DNA (nDNA).In July 2006, the
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and 454 Life
Sciences announced that they would be sequencing the Neanderthal
genome over the next two years. The Neanderthal
genome very likely is roughly the size of the human
genome, three-billion base pairs, and probably shares most of
its genes. It is thought
that a comparison of the Neanderthal
genome and human genome
will expand understanding of Neanderthals as well as the evolution
of humans and human brains.
DNA researcher Svante
Pääbo has tested more than 70 Neanderthal specimens and found
only one which had enough DNA to sample. Preliminary DNA sequencing
from a 38,000-year-old bone fragment of a femur bone found at
Vindija cave in Croatia in 1980
shows that Homo neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens share about 99.5%
of their DNA. From mtDNA analysis estimates, the two species shared
a common ancestor about 500,000 years ago. An article appearing in
the journal Nature
has calculated the species diverged about 516,000 years ago,
whereas fossil records show a time of about 400,000 years ago. From
DNA records, scientists hope to falsify or confirm the theory
that there was interbreeding between the species. A 2007 study
pushes the point of divergence back to around 800,000 years
ago.
Edward Rubin
of the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley,
California states that recent genome testing of Neanderthals
suggests human and Neanderthal DNA are some 99.5 percent to nearly
99.9 percent identical.
On November 16, 2006, Science Daily published
scientific test results demonstrating that Neanderthals and ancient
humans probably did not interbreed. Scientists with the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(Berkeley Lab) and the Joint Genome Institute (JGI) sequenced
genomic nuclear DNA (nDNA) from a fossilized Neanderthal femur.
Their results more precisely indicate a common ancestor about
706,000 years ago, and a complete separation of the ancestors of
the species about 376,000 years ago. Their results show that the
genomes of modern humans and Neanderthals are at least 99.5%
identical, but despite this genetic similarity, and despite the two
species having cohabitated the same geographic region for thousands
of years, there is no evidence of any significant crossbreeding
between the two. Edward Rubin, director of both JGI and Berkeley
Lab’s Genomics Division: “While unable to definitively conclude
that interbreeding between the two species of humans did not occur,
analysis of the nuclear DNA from the Neanderthal suggests the low
likelihood of it having occurred at any appreciable level.”
On the other hand, a 2006 investigation suggested
that at least 5% of the genetic material of modern Europeans and
West Africans has an archaic origin, due to interbreeding with
Neanderthal and a hitherto unknown archaic African population.
Plagnol and Wall arrived at this result by first calculating a
"null model" of genetic characteristics which would fulfill the
requirement of descendence from Homo sapiens sapiens in a straight
line. Next they compared this model to the current distribution and
characteristics of existing genetic polymorphisms, and concluded
that this "null model" deviated considerably from what would be
expected. Genetic simulations indicated this 5% of DNA not
accounted for by the null model corresponds to a substantial
contribution to the European gene pool of up to 25%. Future
investigation—including a full scale Neanderthal
genome project—is expected to cast more light on the subject of
genetic polymorphisms to supply more details. Contrary to the
investigation of mtDNA, the study of polymorph mutations has the
potential to answer the question whether—and to what extent—Homo
neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens interbred.
A main proponent of the interbreeding hypothesis
is Erik
Trinkaus of Washington
University. In a 2006 study published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Trinkaus and
his co-authors report a possibility that Neanderthals and humans
did interbreed. The study claims to settle the extinction
controversy; according to researchers, the human and neanderthal
populations blended together through sexual reproduction. Trinkaus
states, "Extinction through absorption is a common phenomenon." and
"From my perspective, the replacement vs. continuity debate that
raged through the 1990s is now dead".
There is a possibility that Neanderthals and
Cro-Magnons interbred but left little genetic evidence of that.
That is because there is an ongoing debate about whether the
hunter-gatherers of the middle stone age started farming when they
came in contact with agriculture, or were completely replaced by
the farmers moving in from the Middle East. If modern Europeans are
mainly descendents of these farming people with little or no
genetic input of the hunter gatherers of the middle stone age, then
possible interbreeding between them and the Neanderthals would not
have had a great effect on the modern gene-pool.
Key dates
- 1829: Neanderthal skulls were discovered in Engis, Belgium.
- 1848: Skull of an ancient human was found in Forbes' Quarry, Gibraltar. Its significance was not realised at the time.
- 1856: Johann Karl Fuhlrott first recognised the fossil called “Neanderthal man”, discovered in Neanderthal, a valley near Mettmann in what is now North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
- 1880: The mandible of a Neanderthal child was found in a secure context and associated with cultural debris, including hearths, Mousterian tools, and bones of extinct animals.
- 1899: Hundreds of Neanderthal bones were described in stratigraphic position in association with cultural remains and extinct animal bones.
- 1908: A nearly complete Neanderthal skeleton was discovered in association with Mousterian tools and bones of extinct animals.
- 1953-1957: Ralph Solecki uncovered nine Neanderthal skeletons in Shanidar Cave in northern Iraq.
- 1975: Erik Trinkaus’s study of Neanderthal feet confirmed that they walked like modern humans.
- 1987: Thermoluminescence results from Palestine fossils date Neanderthals at Kebara to 60,000 BP and modern humans at Qafzeh to 90,000 BP. These dates were confirmed by Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dates for Qafzeh (90,000 BP) and Es Skhul (80,000 BP).
- 1991: ESR dates showed that the Tabun Neanderthal was contemporaneous with modern humans from Skhul and Qafzeh.
- 1997 Matthias Krings et al. are the first to amplify Neanderthal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) using a specimen from Feldhofer grotto in the Neander valley. Their work is published in the journal Cell.
- 2000: Igor Ovchinnikov, Kirsten Liden, William Goodman et al. retrieved DNA from a Late Neanderthal (29,000 BP) infant from Mezmaikaya Cave in the Caucausus.
- 2005: The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology launched a project to reconstruct the Neanderthal genome.
- 2006: The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology announced that it planned to work with Connecticut-based 454 Life Sciences to reconstruct the Neanderthal genome.
Popular culture
In popular idiom the word neanderthal is
sometimes used as an insult, to suggest that a person combines a
deficiency of intelligence and an attachment to brute force, as
well as perhaps implying the person is old fashioned or attached to
outdated ideas, much in the same way as "dinosaur" is also used.
Counterbalancing this are sympathetic literary portrayals of
Neanderthals, as in the novel
The Inheritors by William
Golding, Isaac
Asimov's The
Ugly Little Boy, and Jean M.
Auel's Earth's
Children series, though Auel repeatedly compares Neanderthals
to modern humans unfavorably within the series, showing them to be
less advanced in nearly every facet of their lives. Instead she
gives them access to a 'race memory' and uses it to explain both
their cultural richness and eventual stagnation. A more serious
treatment is offered by Finnish palaeontologist Björn
Kurtén, in several works including Dance
of the Tiger, and British psychologist Stan Gooch in
his hybrid-origin theory of humans. The
Neanderthal Parallax, a trilogy of science fiction novels
dealing with neanderthals, written by Robert J.
Sawyer, explores a scenario where neanderthals are seen as a
distinct species from humans and survive in a parallel universe
version of earth. The novels explore what happens when they, having
developed a sophisticated technological culture of their own, open
a portal to this version of the earth. The three novels are titled
Hominids, Humans, and Hybrids, respectively, and all form
essentially one story.
See also
- List of Neanderthal sites
- Neanderthal Genome Project
- Neanderthal extinction hypotheses
- List of fossil sites (with link directory)
- List of primate and hominin fossils (with images)
- Physical anthropology
- Caveman
- Abrigo do Lagar Velho - More about "the Lapedo child"
- Almas: Wild Men of Mongolia
Footnotes
Solecki, Ralph S. "Shanidar." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 2007. Grolier Online. 25 Nov. 2007 .References
- Derev’anko, Anatoliy P. 1998 The Paleolithic of Siberia. New Discoveries and Interpretations. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.
- C. David Kreger (2000-06-30) Homo Neanderthalensis
- Dennis O'Neil (2004-12-06) Evolution of Modern Humans Neandertals retrieved 12/26/2004
- Fink, Bob (1997) The Neanderthal Flute... (Greenwich, Canada) ISBN 0-912424-12-5
- Hickmann, Kilmer, Eichmann (ed.) (2003) Studies in Music Archaeology III International Study Group on Music Archaeology's 2000 symposium. ISBN 3-89646-640-2
- link for Nature subscribers
- Boë, Louis-Jean, Jean-Louis Heim, Kiyoshi Honda and Shinji Maeda. (2002) "The potential Neandertal vowel space was as large as that of modern humans." Journal of Phonetics, Volume 30, Issue 3, July 2002, Pages 465-484
- Lieberman, Philip. (2007). "Current views on Neanderthal speech capabilities: A reply to Boe et al. (2002)". Journal of Phonetics, Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 552-563.
- Neanderthal DNA Sequencing
External links
- Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
- Smithsonian
- Archaelogy Info
- MNSU
- "Humans and Neanderthals interbred": Modern humans contain a little bit of Neanderthal, according to a new theory, because the two interbred and became one species. (Cosmos magazine, November 2006)
- BBC.co.uk - 'Neanderthals "mated with modern humans": A hybrid skeleton showing features of both Neanderthal and early modern humans has been discovered, challenging the theory that our ancestors drove Neanderthals to extinction', BBC (April 21, 1999)
-
- BBC.co.uk - 'Neanderthals "had hands like ours": The popular image of Neanderthals as clumsy, backward creatures has been dealt another blow', Helen Briggs, BBC (March 27, 2003)
- GeoCities.com - 'The Neanderthal Sites at Veldwezelt-Hezerwater, Belgium'
- Greenwych.ca - 'Neanderthal Flute: Oldest Musical Instrument's 4 Notes Matches 4 of Do, Re, Mi Scale - Evidence of Natural Foundation to Diatonic Scale (oldest known musical instrument), Greenwich Publishing
-
- Greenwych.ca - 'Chewed or Chipped? Who Made the Neanderthal Flute? Humans or Carnivores?' Bob Fink, Greenwich Publishing (March, 2003)
- IndState.edu - 'Neanderthals: A Cyber Perspective', Kharlena María Ramanan, Indiana State University (1997)
- Krapina.com - 'Krapina: The World's Largest Neanderthal Finding Site'
- Neanderthal.de - 'Neanderthal Museum'
- Neanderthal DNA - 'Neanderthal DNA' Includes Neanderthal mtDNA sequences
- The Cryptid Zoo - 'Neanderthals and Neanderthaloids in Cryptozoology' (modern sightings promoted by the pseudoscience of cryptozoology)
- UniZH.ch - 'Comparing Neanderthals and modern humans: Neanderthals differ from anatomically modern Homo sapiens in a suite of cranial features' (cranio-facial reconstructions), Institut für Informatik der Universität Zürich
- WebShots.com - 'IMG_6922 The Neandertal foot prints' (photo of ~25K years old fossilized footprints discovered in 1970 on volcanic layers near Demirkopru Dam Reservoir, Manisa, Turkey)
- interactive database on the archaeology and anthropology of Neanderthals
- Did free trade cause the extinction of Neanderthals?
- Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA can show conflicting phylogenetic histories
- Neanderthal manifactured pitch
- Homo neanderthalensis reconstruction - Electronic articles published by the Division of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History.
- CBS article on latest scientific speculation about Neanderthals in Gibraltar.
- Neanderthal bone gives DNA clues
- Scientists decode Neanderthal genes
- Scientists Build 'Frankenstein' Neanderthal Skeleton
- A NEANDERTHAL'S DNA TALE
- 'Bone and Stone' A digitally enhanced single frame philatelic exhibit dedicated to the Neanderthal.
- How Neanderthal molar teeth grew
- Mousterian Tools of Neanderthals From Europe - World Museum of Man
- The Way We Are
- Link to picture of the Neanderthal trace near Gediz River in Turkey
- Link to Cross-Eyed stereoview of Neanderthal fossil cast in Chicago Field Museum
Neanderthal in Tosk Albanian: Neandertaler
Neanderthal in Arabic: نياندرتال
Neanderthal in Aromanian: Homo sapiens
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Asturian: Homo sapiens
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Bulgarian: Неандерталец
Neanderthal in Catalan: Home de Neandertal
Neanderthal in Czech: Homo
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Welsh: Dyn Neanderthal
Neanderthal in Danish: Neandertaler
Neanderthal in German: Neandertaler
Neanderthal in Estonian: Neandertallane
Neanderthal in Spanish: Homo
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Esperanto: Neandertala homo
Neanderthal in Basque: Neandertaleko
gizaki
Neanderthal in Persian: نئاندرتال
Neanderthal in French: Homme de Néandertal
Neanderthal in Galician: Home de
Neanderthal
Neanderthal in Korean: 네안데르탈인
Neanderthal in Croatian: Neandertalac
Neanderthal in Icelandic: Neanderdalsmenn
Neanderthal in Italian: Homo
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Hebrew: אדם ניאנדרתלי
Neanderthal in Latin: Homo
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Luxembourgish: Neandertaler
Neanderthal in Lithuanian: Neandertalietis
Neanderthal in Hungarian: Neandervölgyi
ember
Neanderthal in Macedonian: Неандерталец
Neanderthal in Dutch: Neanderthaler
Neanderthal in Japanese: ネアンデルタール人
Neanderthal in Norwegian: Neandertalere
Neanderthal in Polish: Neandertalczyk
Neanderthal in Portuguese: Neandertal
Neanderthal in Romanian: Omul de
Neanderthal
Neanderthal in Russian: Неандерталец
Neanderthal in Sicilian: Homo
neanderthalensis
Neanderthal in Simple English: Neanderthal
Neanderthal in Sindhi: نينڊرٿل
Neanderthal in Slovak: Človek
neandertálsky
Neanderthal in Slovenian: Neandertalec
Neanderthal in Serbian: Неандерталац
Neanderthal in Serbo-Croatian:
Neandertalac
Neanderthal in Finnish:
Neandertalinihminen
Neanderthal in Swedish: Neandertalmänniska
Neanderthal in Tamil: நியண்டர்தால் மனிதன்
Neanderthal in Turkish: Neandertal adamı
Neanderthal in Ukrainian: Неандертальці
Neanderthal in Contenese: 尼安德特人
Neanderthal in Chinese: 尼安德特人
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Goth,
Gothic, animal, barbarian, barbaric, barbarous, bestial, brutal, brute, brutish, ill-bred, impolite, noncivilized, outlandish, primitive, rough-and-ready,
savage, troglodyte, troglodytic, uncivil, uncivilized, uncombed, uncouth, uncultivated, uncultured, unkempt, unlicked, unpolished, unrefined, untamed, wild