Rethinking Neanderthals
Research suggests the so-called brutes fashioned tools, buried their dead, maybe cared for the sick and even conversed. But why, if they were so smart, did they disappear?
- By Joe Alper
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2003, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 8)
“This was really the first demonstration that Neanderthals behaved in what we think of as a fundamentally human way,” says Trinkaus, who in the 1970s helped reconstruct and catalog the Shanidar fossil collection in Baghdad. (One of the skeletons is held by the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History.) “The result was that those of us studying Neanderthals started thinking about these people in terms of their behavior and not just their anatomy.”
Neanderthals inhabited a vast area roughly from present-day England east to Uzbekistan and south nearly to the Red Sea. Their time spanned periods in which glaciers advanced and retreated again and again. But the Neanderthals adjusted. When the glaciers moved in and edible plants became scarcer, they relied more heavily on large, hoofed animals for food, hunting the reindeer and wild horses that grazed the steppes and tundra.
Paleoanthropologists have no idea how many Neanderthals existed (crude estimates are in the many thousands), but archaeologists have found more fossils from Neanderthals than from any extinct human species. The first Neanderthal fossil was uncovered in Belgium in 1830, though nobody accurately identified it for more than a century. In 1848, the Forbes Quarry in Gibraltar yielded one of the most complete Neanderthal skulls ever found, but it, too, went unidentified, for 15 years. The name Neanderthal arose after quarrymen in Germany’s NeanderValley found a cranium and several long bones in 1856; they gave the specimens to a local naturalist, Johann Karl Fuhlrott, who soon recognized them as the legacy of a previously unknown type of human. Over the years, France, the Iberian Peninsula, southern Italy and the Levant have yielded abundances of Neanderthal remains, and those finds are being supplemented by newly opened excavations in Ukraine and Georgia. “It seems that everywhere we look, we’re finding Neanderthal remains,” says Loyola’s Smith. “It’s an exciting time to be studying Neanderthals.”
Clues to some Neanderthal ways of life come from chemical analyses of fossilized bones, which confirm that Neanderthals were meat eaters. Microscopic studies hint at cannibalism; fossilized deer and Neanderthal bones found at the same site bear identical scrape marks, as though the same tool removed the muscle from both animals.
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Comments (5)
Reading up on Neanderthals is very interesting and I find it intriguing that present day academics are revisiting with an eye toward reinterpretation what has been handed down from previous generations on the subject. That's all well and good but as an average Joe I quickly tire of those who bring too heavy an approach to interpreting archaeological evidence. Chillax, dudes.
The Neanderthals had their time in the sun, they hung out and they moved on and faded away. IMHO there really isn't all that much more to be gleaned from the ash pits and caves that would be all that relevant to modern man. Will the next stunning revelation about some ancient peoples prevent the next war? I doubt it.
Posted by Daniel O'Hare on November 25,2011 | 03:18 PM
Neanderthal flint tools are often fashioned for left handed use. More interesting is how many of the tools fit the hand very closely, even cortexes tools still have other refinements for a more comfortable fit during use. The tools are very durable and often have course and fine cutting areas. It is clear to me after close study of these tools that a different mentality fashioned them other than a fully modern man. They saw a rock and fashioned it to be a tool but rarely did they fashion it 100%. It still looks like a rock but is in fact is a very easy to use tool. In modern man we see a piece of flint changed completely to a new form like an American Arrow head, the arrow head no longer resembles the original shape of the raw material it was fashioned from. The modern arrow head is not very durable, so for all the work put into an arrow head it is clear a more deliberate use of ART can be seen. Neanderthal man did not lack art but it is clear they did not see a completely different object from a raw material starting shape. As long as the tool was comfortable and workable Neanderthal man did not add any value in abstract art. These tools can be dated simply by seeing Neanderthal style along with strata and sandstone impregnation on previously worked areas. Please see the tools I collected.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/61060647@N04/page2/
Posted by Steve Brackmann on March 27,2011 | 09:19 PM
Good article about Neanderthals.
Posted by Kara on March 19,2011 | 02:30 AM
It's been known for 30 years or more that HS Neanderthalensis had a greater brain capacity than HS Sapiens, and were capable of toolmaking and artwork demanding a jeweller's loupe, as well as making and using bone and flaked stone tools. Why the sudden flurry of revisionism? Perhaps it's about time that the old ideas about HS Neanderthalensis were completely rewritten, with the boffins publicly eating their words. Even if you revise them as being 100% human, the die-hards will stick to their 'subhuman' theory, just as hundreds of Aboriginals were killed in 19thC Australia and many graves robbed to 'prove' Darwin's missing link: after all, if they're subhuman, killing and genocide isn't murder, is it?
Posted by Graham Stitz on December 5,2008 | 07:55 AM
This is interesting. Since my first Anthropology Class all of the "missing links" have been either done away with or modernized to sapian speciae. This means that Pilt Down, Java, Peking, et al. were personifications and imaginations. Poor science at best. Now I am reading that Neanderthal were actually sapien. This makes perfect sense if early gene pools diverged rapidly (Australoids, Negriods, Mongoloids, etc.) I am glad that Evolutionary and Anthropoligical Scientists are finally coming clean. ( I will miss brontosaurus though....)
Posted by Spencer on December 4,2008 | 07:49 PM