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- <text id=94TT0291>
- <link 94TO0152>
- <title>
- Mar. 14, 1994: The Neanderthal Mystery
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 86
- The Neanderthal Mystery
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by Alice Park/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> At first the German workmen thought they had found the remains
- of an extinct cave bear. Quarrying for limestone on a summer
- day in 1856, they had blasted open a small cave on the side
- of a gorge called Neanderthal (Neander Valley), near Dusseldorf,
- and were digging up the cave floor with pickaxes when they came
- upon the strange skull and sturdy bones. Setting the skeletal
- remains aside, they kept digging, never dreaming that their
- discovery would soon spark confusion, dismay and heated debate
- that has continued to this day.
- </p>
- <p> Those bones (and others since unearthed as far away as England
- in the north, Uzbekistan to the east and Israel in the south)
- are the remains of what have come to be known as the Neanderthals,
- a primitive people who lived from around 200,000 to 27,000 years
- ago. And while many misconceptions and mysteries about Neanderthals
- have been resolved, one question remains unanswered: Were the
- Neanderthals a branch on the evolutionary tree that withered
- and died while Homo sapiens--modern human beings--continued
- to evolve? Or were they really ancestors of at least some people
- living today?
- </p>
- <p> At the time of the Neander Valley find, Charles Darwin had not
- yet published his famous The Origin of Species, and evolution
- was still, at best, only a hazy conjecture among a handful of
- scientists. Indeed, most people then believed that human beings
- had remained essentially unchanged since creation.
- </p>
- <p> Examining the skullcap, ribs, part of the pelvis and some limb
- bones taken from the cave, Dr. William King, an Irish geologist,
- suggested that the fossil might be an extinct form of humanity,
- a different species. The skull, with its prominent brow ridge,
- led him to declare that "thoughts and desires which once dwelt
- within it never soared beyond those of a brute."
- </p>
- <p> But most scientists of the time disputed even the Neanderthal
- man's antiquity. Rudolf Virchow, a respected German anatomist,
- pronounced the caveman to be a modern Homo sapiens, whose deformations
- were caused by rickets in childhood and arthritis later in life.
- And his flattened skull? He had suffered powerful blows to the
- head, Virchow opined.
- </p>
- <p> Virchow's views were widely accepted until 1886, when two more
- Neanderthal skeletons were discovered in a cave in the Spy region
- of Belgium. While Virchow claimed that these too were the remains
- of diseased modern humans, other scientists regarded such a
- coincidence as unlikely; they were more impressed by primitive
- tools and the remnants of extinct animals found near the skeletons.
- The Neanderthals, they agreed, were ancient. Still, they insisted
- that, Darwin's controversial new theory notwithstanding, the
- strange creatures could not possibly be ancestral to exalted
- human beings like themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Then, in the early 1900s, large numbers of Neanderthal skeletons
- were discovered, mainly in the Dordogne region of southern France.
- With these specimens in hand, scientists felt that they could
- better describe the physical appearance of a Neanderthal man,
- and the task of reconstructing one fell to noted French paleontologist
- Marcellin Boule.
- </p>
- <p> Apparently burdened by preconceptions and the prevailing bias
- against the notion of Neanderthal ancestors, Boule concluded
- that a Neanderthal had prehensile feet, could not fully extend
- his legs, and thrust his head awkwardly forward because his
- spine prevented him from standing upright. In his scientific
- papers, Boule described the "brutish appearance of this muscular
- and clumsy body." This almost simian image persisted largely
- unchallenged for decades. Indeed, vestiges of it remain today
- in such manifestations as textbook illustrations, the Alley
- Oop cartoon strip, and in the pejorative use of "Neanderthal."
- </p>
- <p> But the image was wrong. In 1957 American and British researchers
- re-examined the skeleton that Boule had studied and concluded
- that Neanderthals stood upright; the stooped posture of Boule's
- specimen was attributable to arthritis. Also the feet were not
- prehensile, nor was the spine curved. They further noted that
- the Neanderthal's brain was as large as that of early modern
- humans, a fact that Boule ignored in his publications.
- </p>
- <p> In the past few decades, the perception of Neanderthals has
- undergone still more changes. Evidence from various digs has
- revealed that they wielded simple tools, wore body ornaments,
- had religious rites and ceremoniously buried their dead.
- </p>
- <p> But for all the research into Neanderthals, the relationship
- between them and modern humans is still a topic for hot debate.
- Some textbooks classify Neanderthals as a subspecies within
- Homo sapiens; others list a separate species, Homo neanderthalensis.
- British paleontologist Christopher Stringer is convinced that
- Neanderthals evolved in Europe from Homo erectus and suddenly
- became extinct between 35,000 and 30,000 years ago, unable to
- compete effectively with Homo sapiens originating in Africa.
- "In my view," he says, "they are a dead end--highly evolved
- in their own direction but not in the direction of modern humans."
- </p>
- <p> Among the experts who agree is Yoel Rak, an anatomist at Tel
- Aviv University. He believes "Neanderthals have nothing to do
- with our history." They may well have become extinct, he says,
- because they were too highly specialized--probably well adapted
- to survive the frigid temperatures of Ice Age Europe. But when
- such conditions change, he notes, "the highly specialized creatures
- are at a tremendous disadvantage."
- </p>
- <p> Other scientists say Neanderthal genes survive today. Milford
- Wolpoff, an anthropologist at the University of Michigan, points
- to Neanderthal features in early Europeans as evidence that
- considerable interbreeding took place between Neanderthals and
- Homo sapiens, who coexisted for tens of thousands of years in
- some regions.
- </p>
- <p> Ofer Bar-Yosef, a Harvard University anthropologist, believes
- the intermingling occurred when the advance of Ice Age glaciers
- forced Neanderthals to move south into Homo sapiens' regions
- and when retreating glaciers allowed early Homo sapiens to follow
- Neanderthals back into northern climes. Still others, citing
- anatomical changes in the most recent Neanderthals, think they
- evolved independently into early Europeans.Wolpoff suggests
- a Solomonic solution for resolving the Neanderthal debate: phrasing
- the question correctly. "We can't be asking, `Are Neanderthals
- the ancestors of humans?' " he says. "We should be asking, `Are
- some Neanderthals ancestral to some Europeans?' And the answer
- is yes."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-