I don't get why the writer seems to be scared of Neanderthals. I had always hoped they were still among us. Years ago, scientists used to say brain size was directly related to intelligence, the larger the brain, the higher the intelligence. That changed over the years, Neanderthal has a larger brain than we do, Dolphins have a larger brain, Whales. Of course with our 'great wisdom' they cannot be more intelligent than we are. I remember in Anthropology class, it was making and using tools is what made us superior, more intelligent. That changed when researchers found Chimps modifying grass and sticks to use for gathering termites. Some birds use thorns to pick grubs out of wood, Sea Otters use stones to break open shell fish, etc etc. Most pictures of Neanderthals show them as lumbering almost human beings, but some of the newest research shows we really wouldn't notice them if they were alive today. They would fit in with the people on the street. As Solomon said long ago, it is vanity, all vanity. And we continue to wonder. . .John
The Scariest Thing about Neanderthals
By Meredith F. Small, LiveScience's Human Nature Columnist
posted: 02 November 2007 12:56 pm ET
Who knew the Weasley family trademark—a shock of bright red hair—was tens of thousands of years old?
Fictional wizards and J.K. Rowling aside, researchers Carles Lalueza-Fox of the University of Barcelona, Spain and Holger Rompler of the University of Leipzig in Germany announced last week that Neanderthals, who died out 35,000 years ago, had the same distribution of hair and skin color as modern human European populations. By inference, that means that about 1 percent of Neanderthals must have been redheads, with pale skin and freckles.
"Gibraltar I:
Reconstruction of a
ca. four-year-old
Neandertal"
The idea of Neanderthals with red hair and freckles is just plain charming. But it's also scary because it underscores the fact that Neanderthals were so much like us, and now they're gone.
Ever since their
But these ancient fellow Europeans were also culturally sophisticated. They buried their dead, built shelters, made tools, used fire and hunted. The may have had language (DNA sequencing has also revealed they carried the FOXP2 gene which is linked to language ability). And they had brains 100 cubic centimeters larger than people today.
And so why have these interesting people been relegated to second-class citizen status?
Because they threaten us.
Neanderthals are chronologically the closest, and the most familiar, example that we have of our kind disappearing off the face of the Earth, and that means we can go too.
No one knows exactly why Neanderthals went extinct, but the possibilities are also troubling.
They may have been wiped out by disease or bad weather. Or overpopulated their habitat and run out of food, fuel, and decent water.
They may have once been the greatest society on Earth, but in their arrogance ignored the smaller-brained hominids (that would be us) on the other side of the hill and been caught off guard and slaughtered in the first genocide.
Perhaps Neanderthals were simply unable to adapt to changing times, unable to lift their blinders and see beyond their own borders to the march of humanity across the globe.
Neanderthals scare us because they are ghosts from the past, a few with wizardly Weasley hair and a sprinkle of freckles, and they are now turned in our direction whispering, "You're not so unique. Watch out."
Meredith F. Small is an anthropologist at Cornell University. She is also the author of "Our Babies, Ourselves; How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parent" (link) and "The Culture of Our Discontent; Beyond the Medical Model of Mental Illness" (link).
Good read..I always thought they were more like us..Type C influenza almost did us in. Makes you wonder. I heard that too about large brains and tools. :)
ReplyDeletegreat read..... but I still believe, that on a pure survival, ethical and moral basis, our winged, finned and four-legged friends are light-years ahead of us, and their intelligence and pure instinct should not be frowned upon !! We have a lot to learn from them!
ReplyDeleteOnce again very interesting and informative post, as they most often are. You really make my thoughts to fly around.
ReplyDeleteInteresting reading. Thankk you.
ReplyDeleteIn some way life was probably much happier then, certainly simpler than the life most of us lead today.
ReplyDeleteExcellent entry sir. I wonder too? To be that way about something so far in the past. I am intrigued always to learn more about our so far away beginnings. I find it fasinating. Now, if I could just find out about my Great Grandmother, who gave me this wonderful Cherokee blood that flows through my body. There are no records that I can find. My White Fawn sent me a site to look, I have researched many hours. Oh well, one day I will. If they are there, I'll find them, no doubt. Her precious name was Aseuntha. I hope that I spell it right. LOL. My father hid these things from me until this past June, at our one and only family reunion. There are only six adults, about nine cousins left of our line. Those cousins will have children too one day. Here I am spewing so much excess verbiage here. Thank you again for another very interesting read sir. Be well. Namaste beautiful friend.
ReplyDeleteWow! thank you, i enjoyed reading so much.
ReplyDeleteAwesome! Love the blog John!
ReplyDeleteI have red hair and freckles lol But seriously I am rereading The Clan of the Cave Bear, it is a historical fiction novel by Jean M. Auel. It is the first in the Earth's Children series that investigates the possibility of Neanderthal and modern Cro-magnon humans living near each other at the same time.
ReplyDeleteIt's my favorite book of all time, its written in such a simple way, it brings you there back in time, you experience life as it was then. Someone borrowed it from me and never returned it, and I just found it in a second hand book store, so I am rereading it.
Also I watch sea birds dropping clams onto the rocks on the beach so they crack open and then they get to eat the clams and in a way those stones are their tools.
Hey I never thought of a red headed Neanderthal before. Thanks John, interesting article.
ReplyDeleteThis is great reading John....I think maybe I'll re-read the clan of the cave bear also....it was a great series and it's been years.
ReplyDeleteExcellent Blog and most interesting. Perhaps we should take heed of your words, lest we too disappear.
ReplyDeleteHow interesting and it is so true that History tends to repeat itself so we should beware ~ sorta makes a big nose or no chin OR what ever we worry about today seem so unimportant. Goes right back to we are who we are and thousands of years from now ~ we will just be thought of (if at all) as just who we are also and that will be fine.
ReplyDeleteglad i dont have red and freckles, guess Im safe..maybe.? Smiles..informative blog my friend..thanks
ReplyDeleteoh and I loved Clan of the Cave Bear too...
ReplyDeleteI have always been intrigued and fascinated by that quote from Ecclesiastes you refer to...it's one of my favorites.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting blog! You know, maybe our disappearance will be the answer. Wonder who or what would take our place then. Perhaps those who come after will be wiser, having learnt from our mistakes, but then again, if they're anything like us, the chances are that they wouldn't.
ReplyDelete