Neanderthals ... They're Just Like Us?

Rain's picture

National Geographic - Sarah Zielinski, 10/12/12

The Neanderthals are both the most familiar and the least understood of all our fossil kin.

A reconstruction of a Neanderthal female.

Like some other Neanderthals, "Wilma," a DNA-based reconstruction, was red-headed, freckled, and fair. Photograph by Joe McNally, National Geographic

For decades after the initial discovery of their bones in a cave in Germany in 1856 Homo neanderthalensis was viewed as a hairy brute who stumbled around Ice Age Eurasia on bent knees, eventually to be replaced by elegant, upright Cro-Magnon, the true ancestor of modern Europeans.

Science has long since killed off the notion of that witless caveman, but Neanderthals have still been regarded as quintessential losers—a large-brained, well-adapted species of human that went extinct nevertheless, yielding the Eurasian continent to anatomically modern humans, who began to migrate out of Africa some 60,000 years ago.

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