The Neanderthal

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The Neanderthal, or Homo Neanderthalensis were a subspecies of humans, found in the Neander River in Germany, which they are named after. It is thought they went extinct around 40,000 to 28,000 years ago. The remains of Neanderthal have been located throughout much of Northern and western Asia as well as Western Europe. They are typically classified as a separate lineage of Homo Sapiens, which separated around 600,000 years ago.
Neanderthals were closely related to modern humans (Homo Sapiens Sapiens), with DNA of around 99.5% the same. While looking at their physical similarities to modern humans, they are also quite similar in that regard as well. Their bodies were overall shorter than modern humans, with males standing somewhere between …show more content…

Mousterian class tools are typically found all throughout Europe, North Africa as well as the Middle East. Neanderthals typically used a technique called soft hammer percussion which focussed on constructing hammers out of bones and wood, instead of hard hammer percussion, which used hammers made of stone instead. As a result, their bone industry is quite simple, that is, the tools they made out of bones were simple as a result of their production methods. The Neanderthals were not limited to only bone tools, they also used many sophisticated hand axes and spears as tools as …show more content…

They not only constructed and built their own tools, but there is some evidence also for the possibility of a Neanderthal language. In an article by Melissa Hogenboom (BBC News, December, 2013), in which she cites a research article by a group of scientists researching the possibility of speech and language within Neanderthals (Micro-Biomechanics of the Kebara 2 Hyoid and Its Implications for Speech in Neanderthals, 2013). In the article, it makes mention of the hypoid bone, and how this bone is “crucial for speaking as it supports the root of the tongue. In non-human primates, it is not placed in the right position to vocalise like humans.”. The team of scientists from the original research group analysed a fossil throat bone using three dimensional x-rays, with one of the professors stating that “We would argue that this is a very significant step forward. It shows that the Kebara 2 hyoid doesn 't just look like those of modern humans – it was used in a very similar way.”. Professor Stephen Wroe then goes on to comment that “Many would argue that our capacity for speech and language is among the most fundamental of characteristics that make us human. If Neanderthals also had language then they were truly human, too.”(BBC News, 20th December 2013). The research done by these scientists and professors is extremely important, as it suggests the possibility that anatomically modern humans may not have been the only

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