20 Things You Didn't Know About...
Neanderthals
The
hominids are depicted as degenerate and slouching because the first Neanderthal
skeleton found happened to be arthritic.
1. You’re pretty much a Neanderthal.
While it’s been more than 5 million years since we parted ways with chimps, it
has been only 400,000 since human and Neanderthal lineages split.
2. If you’re Asian or Caucasian, your
ancestors interbred with Neanderthals as recently as 37,000 years ago, when
they crossed paths in Europe.
3. And that sex had benefits. Inherited
Neanderthal genes come in alleles that help fight off nasty viruses such as
Epstein-Barr — associated with several kinds of cancer, says Stanford
University immunologist Laurent Abi-Rached.
4. If you want to know how much
Neanderthal DNA you carry, just swab your cheek and send it to the National
Geographic Society’s Genographic Project. Or you could have your entire genome
sequenced as Ozzy Osbourne did in 2010. Researchers found a telltale
Neanderthal segment on his chromosome 10.
5. Now that the whole Neanderthal genome
has been sequenced, Harvard geneticist George Church thinks a clone could be
gestated in a human surrogate mother. It could even be beneficial, he believes,
because the Neanderthal mind might be able to solve problems we can’t.
6. Practically nobody believed you could
read a Neanderthal’s genes until 2010, when the paleogeneticist Svante Pääbo
successfully sequenced DNA from three Neanderthal skeletons found in
Croatia.
7. The first evidence of Neanderthals was
discovered in 1856. Miners in Germany’s Neander Valley found fossils thought to
belong to a cave bear. A local natural historian begged to differ. He reckoned
the strange bones were the remains of a lost Cossack suffering from
rickets.
8. Charles Darwin published On the
Origin of Species three years later. In the context of Darwin’s theories of
evolution, the bones were re-examined by anatomist William King, who promptly
named them Homo neanderthalensis, a name that provocatively (and
incorrectly) suggested they were the missing link between apes and
humans.
9. As late as the mid-1970s, creationists
were still claiming Neanderthal fossils were the remains of modern humans with
acromegaly or arthritis.
10. Paleontologist Marcellin Boule would
have been well advised to study pathology. Between 1909 and 1911, he
reconstructed the first skeleton of a Neanderthal — who happened to be
arthritic. Thus was born the degenerate, slouching image of Neanderthals.
11. They were the ultimate craftsmen, able
to pick up impressive skills through practice, but none too creative, say
anthropologist Thomas Wynn and psychologist Frederick L. Coolidge of the
University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
12. Credit Neanderthals with a couple of
great ideas: They made spears by hafting stone points to wooden shafts, and
bonding them with glue.
13. They threw those spears at bison and
woolly rhinoceros, resulting in hunting injuries that would end the career of a
linebacker.
14. Not that a maimed Neanderthal could
afford to retire. Instead they nursed each other back to health, enlisting
their greatest concept of all: empathy.
15. They also had medicine. Traces of
chamomile and yarrow, two anti-inflammatories, have been detected in the plaque
on Neanderthal teeth.
16. Or are these pungent traces of haute
cuisine? Neanderthals balanced their carnivorous diets with vegetables roasted
over smoky fires.
17. And they had a sense of style.
Archaeologists have recovered a yellow pigment in southern Spain that may have
been used as foundation for their skin.
18. Evidently Spain was the place to be if
you were a Neanderthal with cultural pretensions. Last summer, paintings in El
Castillo Cave on the Pas River were found to be at least 40,800 years
old.
19. They were better painters than
talkers. The anatomy of their vocal tracts would have prevented them from
sounding some vowels.
20. In any case, we lost our chance at
conversation, since they died out some 25,000 years ago. Their last refuge was
Gibraltar, now a haven for tax evaders.
The
link can be found at:
http://discovermagazine.com/2013/dec/22-20-things-you-didnt-know-aboutneanderthals
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