Neanderthals Latest News
A recent study supports the view that Neanderthals were not wiped out in a dramatic extinction, but were instead genetically absorbed into the emerging human population over thousands of years.
About Neanderthals
- They were an extinct relative of modern humans once found across Europe, extending into Central and Southwest Asia.
- Species: Homo neanderthalensis
- The name Neanderthal (or Neandertal) derives from the Neander Valley in Germany, where the fossils were first found.
- They are the closest extinct relatives of modern humans (Homo sapiens).
- Scientific evidence suggests our two species shared a common ancestor.
- Neanderthals were closely related to another group of extinct, little-known human relatives called the Denisovans.
- Current evidence from both fossils and DNA suggests that Neanderthal and modern human lineages separated at least 500,000 years ago.
- The last populations of Neanderthals are thought to have died out roughly 40,000 years ago, several thousand years or so after a wave of modern humans migrated deeper into Europe.
- Although they are long extinct, their genes are still present in modern human DNA.Â
Neanderthals Features
- Some defining features of their skulls include the large middle part of the face, angled cheek bones, and a huge nose for humidifying and warming cold, dry air.Â
- Their bodies were shorter and stockier than modern humans, another adaptation to living in cold environments.
- But their brains were just as large as modern humans and often larger-proportional to their brawnier bodies.
- Their bones reveal that they were extremely muscular and strong, but led hard lives, suffering frequent injuries.
- Unlike modern humans, Neanderthals didn’t have much of a chin.
- Neanderthals made and used a diverse set of sophisticated tools, controlled fire, lived in shelters, made and wore clothing, were skilled hunters of large animals, ate plant foods, and occasionally made symbolic or ornamental objects.Â
- Around 300,000 years ago Neanderthals developed an innovative stone technology known as the Levallois technique.Â
- This involved making pre-shaped stone cores that could be finessed into a finished tool at a later time.Â
- There is evidence that Neanderthals deliberately buried their dead and occasionally even marked their graves with offerings, such as flowers.
- No other primates, and no earlier human species, had ever practiced this sophisticated and symbolic behavior.
Source: IDR
Neanderthals FAQs
Q1: Neanderthals were found across which regions?
Ans: Europe and parts of Central and Southwest Asia.
Q2: Who are considered the closest extinct relatives of modern humans?
Ans: Neanderthals
Q3: Neanderthals and modern humans are believed to have diverged at least how many years ago?
Ans: 500,000 years ago
Q4: What is the scientific name of Neanderthals?
Ans: Homo neanderthalensis