In “Contested Bones,” geneticist John Sanford writes that
the majority of the paleontological scholars now regard the Neanderthals as HS.
He cites paleoanthropologist Clive Finlayson, Director of the Gibraltar Museum,
who has claimed that the evidence for their humanity is overwhelming:
·
The irony is that the scientific community is
going to have to come round to the acceptance that the Denisovans and the
Neanderthals also belonged to the species which we all call Homo sapiens. (BBC News, 31 December 2010)
This is an important question. Many had tried to make the
case that these were a separate species. Early paleontological drawings characterized
Neanderthals as apes, even though their morphology contradicted these
depictions. Sanford writes that:
·
Since the time of Darwin, Neanderthals have been
proclaimed to the world as a separate sub-human species, unworthy of the
classification Homo sapiens.
They
argued that Neanderthals were our pre-human ancestors to support their
contention that we had evolved from our ape-like ancestors. However, according
to Sanford, this claim has been overturned:
·
There is now compelling evidence, from numerous
sources, that the Neanderthals were fully human and should be classified as
Homo sapiens. Neanderthal anatomy is overwhelmingly modern—as the paleo
community now universally concedes. The most notable differences are confined
to the skull; however those same features are seen in certain skulls belonging
to Homo sapiens...many contemporary paleo-experts have further noted that
Neanderthals and Homo sapiens can be arranged into a morphological continuum,
which argues against their separateness as a species.. (51)
Even
the “sequencing of the Neanderthal genome confirmed” that they too were human.
Sanford adds that “the Neanderthals lived together in the same communities [as
HS], intermarried, worked together, and were buried together” (51). On the
average, we even have 1-4% distinctively Neanderthal genes.
As
a result, some experts now maintain that they didn’t die off. Instead, they
“disappeared” through assimilation.
This
evidence should silence the theory that the Neanderthals had been our pre-human
ancestors.
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