https://www.sciencenews.org/article/neandertal-fire-making-tools-flint-iron
https://archive.ph/DwCAO
A few ambiguous sites do not justify portraying Neandertals as a cannibalistic species. Portraying Neandertals as a “cannibal species” is sensationalised and unsupported by limited, site-specific, and ambiguous archaeological evidence. While some Neandertal sites show bone modifications from butchering, these are rare and context-dependent, and don't support widespread or systematic cannibalism often portrayed in media. 1. Archaeological ambiguity & equifinality: Cut marks, breakage, and bone fragments can result from various processes—mortuary rituals, animal scavenging, water transport, or post-depositional events—not just consumption. 2. Extremely limited frequency: Confirmed possible cannibalistic cases come from few sites among hundreds of Neandertal occupations, suggesting isolated events. 3. Context-dependent scenarios: Evidence often links to extreme circumstances like starvation, inter-group violence, or survival, not routine diet. 4. Taphonomic constraints: Fragmentation, small samples, missing data, and incomplete excavations limit behaviour inference. 5. Behavioural ecology: Neandertals were efficient large-game hunters, making reliance on human flesh unlikely and unnecessary. Sensational claims depict Neandertals as cannibalistic, distorting our view of an intelligent, resilient hominin. Such misinterpretations fuel pseudo-science and obscure the nuance needed to understand rare, context-specific behaviour. A cautious, evidence-based approach offers a fairer, more accurate view and avoids overgeneralisation. #Neandertals #Cannibalism #Paleoanthropology #HumanOrigins
Posted into CROSSFIRE @crossfire-HariTulsidas
A few ambiguous sites do not justify portraying Neandertals as a cannibalistic species. Portraying Neandertals as a “cannibal species” is sensationalised and unsupported by limited, site-specific, and ambiguous archaeological evidence. While some Neandertal sites show bone modifications from butchering, these are rare and context-dependent, and don't support widespread or systematic cannibalism often portrayed in media. 1. Archaeological ambiguity & equifinality: Cut marks, breakage, and bone fragments can result from various processes—mortuary rituals, animal scavenging, water transport, or post-depositional events—not just consumption. 2. Extremely limited frequency: Confirmed possible cannibalistic cases come from few sites among hundreds of Neandertal occupations, suggesting isolated events. 3. Context-dependent scenarios: Evidence often links to extreme circumstances like starvation, inter-group violence, or survival, not routine diet. 4. Taphonomic constraints: Fragmentation, small samples, missing data, and incomplete excavations limit behaviour inference. 5. Behavioural ecology: Neandertals were efficient large-game hunters, making reliance on human flesh unlikely and unnecessary. Sensational claims depict Neandertals as cannibalistic, distorting our view of an intelligent, resilient hominin. Such misinterpretations fuel pseudo-science and obscure the nuance needed to understand rare, context-specific behaviour. A cautious, evidence-based approach offers a fairer, more accurate view and avoids overgeneralisation. #Neandertals #Cannibalism #Paleoanthropology #HumanOrigins
Posted into CROSSFIRE @crossfire-HariTulsidas
Pollen clumps associated with the skeleton of the Shanidar 4 Neanderthal were interpreted by the excavator as evidence for a purposeful burial with flowers.
-- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440323001024
Reference:
Richard Ågren et al. Major Genetic Risk Factors for Dupuytren's Disease Are Inherited From Neandertals.
Molecular Biology and Evolution, 2023; 40 (6) DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msad130
https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article/40/6/msad130/7197475
* [Wikipedia] Neanderthal: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neanderthal
#DupuytrensDisease #Neandertals #Neanderthals #GWAS #GenomeWideAssociationStudies #EPDR1 #RiskVariants #QTL #QuantitativeTraitLoci #persagen