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By Cameron Balbirnie
BBC Horizon Programme
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Rebuilding the Neanderthal
past |
In 1848,
a strange skull was discovered on the military outpost of Gibraltar.
It was undoubtedly human, but also had some of the heavy features of
an ape - distinct brow ridges, and a forward projecting face.
Just what was this ancient creature? And when had it lived?
As more remains were discovered one thing became clear: this
creature had once lived right across Europe. The remains were named
Homo neanderthalensis - or Neanderthal Man - an ancient and
primitive form of human.
The archaeological evidence revealed that the earliest
Neanderthals had lived in Europe about 200,000 years ago. But then,
about 30,000 years ago, they disappeared - just at the time when the
first "modern humans" appear in Europe.
The story is that our ancestors, those modern humans, spread out
of Africa about 100,000 years ago with better brains and more
sophisticated tools. As they spread into Neanderthal territory, they
simply out-competed their primitive cousins.
But was Neanderthal really the brutish ape-man of legend, or an
effective rival to our own species? And how exactly had he been
driven to extinction?
This week's Horizon programme brings together a team of leading
experts to see just what we could find out about this remarkable
creature, from the bones themselves. But to begin we needed a
skeleton, and no complete Neanderthal has ever been found.
However, Gary Sawyer, a reconstruction expert at the American
Museum of Natural History in New York, US, realised that enough
partial skeletons existed to create an entire composite skeleton
from casts of the fragments.
So Sawyer combined and rebuilt broken parts to create the most
complete Neanderthal the world had ever seen. Our Neanderthal stood
no more than 1.6m (5ft 4in) tall, and yet he had a robust and
powerful build - perfect for his ice-age environment.
But would he have really stood up to the cold better than us?
Cold Adaptation
The popular image of the ice age is a period of unremitting
freezing conditions.
But over nearly a million years, Europe has seen huge climate
swings - warm and cold.
For much of the last 200,000 years, when Neanderthals were alive,
the climate was mild, sometimes even warmer than that which we
experience today. But they did also have to live through periods of
intense cold.
Our body plan expert Professor Trenton Holliday, from Tulane
University, US, revealed that our skeleton had comparatively short
limbs and a deep, wide ribcage.
Neanderthals would have had an advantage in
cold
conditions |
The
theory is that this body plan minimises the body's surface area to
retain heat, and to keep vital organs embedded deep within the body
to insulate them from the cold.
To see if this would have helped Neanderthal to survive we
brought anthropologist Professor Leslie Aiello, from University
College London, UK, to Loughborough University to team up with Dr
George Havenith, who runs a laboratory studying the way modern
humans retain heat.
In an experiment, two modern humans with very different body
shapes were subjected to cooling in an ice bath - one with the long
limbed, athletic shape of a runner, the other with the stockier,
heavily muscled body plan closer to that of a Neanderthal.
The heavily muscled person lasted longer in the ice bath, so
Neanderthals would have had an advantage. His muscle would have
acted as an insulator, and his deep chest did help to keep organs
warm.
Even so, the advantage doesn't mean that Neanderthal could have
survived the icy extremes - this was a polar wasteland and his
heavily muscled body plan needed a lot of feeding: about twice as
much as we need today.
Hunting
The archaeological record suggests that Neanderthals lived around
the edges of forests where they hunted large animals like red deer,
horse, and wild cattle. The forests gave them firewood, and
materials to construct shelters, and spears.
By studying Neanderthal stone spear points, Professor John Shea
from Stony Brook University, New York, US, has found that the shafts
of Neanderthal spears would have been thick and heavy. And if they
hunted in woodland, then trying to throw these spears at animals
would have been useless. So just how did Neanderthals hunt?
Professor Trenton Holliday can identify a clue in the BBC
Neanderthal - he was much stronger on the right side than on the
left, and his right forearm was particularly powerful, demonstrating
a very powerful grip.
To see how this muscle development might have related to hunting,
Professor Steve Churchill, from Duke University, US, carried out
another experiment.
By fitting a metal pole with stress sensors, he could determine
what force each arm was delivering when the pole was thrust into a
pad. It turns out that this action could explain the muscle
development identified in the skeleton.
So Neanderthal was an ambush hunter; waiting in a forest for his
prey to stray close, and then attacking with a thrusting spear.
Neanderthal was possibly the most carnivorous form of human ever to
have lived.
Intelligence
What else could the skeleton tell us? Professor Ralph Holloway,
from Columbia University, New York, US, is an expert on ancient
brains. By taking casts of the inside of ancient skulls, he looks
for details that might offer clues to the anatomy of the brain that
was once inside.
His assessment of our skull was startling: 20% larger than the
average size of a modern human's brain, and anatomically identical.
He could tell that this Neanderthal was right-handed and that that
the areas of brain responsible for complex thought were just as
advanced. He should have had the ability to think like us.
But one of the ways we use our brains is very particular: we
talk. This ability makes us unique in the world today, and
ultimately human. So was it possible to tell if Neanderthal could
have spoken?
Neanderthal was possibly the most carnivorous
form of human ever to have
lived |
A tiny
bone in the throat, called the hyoid, offered a clue. This bone
supports the soft tissue of the throat, and several groups of
scientists are attempting to model that soft tissue from the bones
and discover what Neanderthal might have sounded like.
Professor Bob Franciscus, from Iowa University, US, is one of a
multi-national group attempting to do just this. By making scans of
modern humans, he can see how the soft tissue of the vocal tracts
depends on the position of the hyoid bone and the anchoring sites on
the skull.
Computer predictions can then be made that can determine the
shape of the modern human vocal tract from bone data alone. The same
equations can then be used with data from a Neanderthal skull to
predict the shape of a Neanderthal vocal tract.
The Neanderthal vocal tract seems to have been shorter and wider
than a modern male human, closer to that found today in modern human
females. It's possible, then, that Neanderthal males had higher
pitched voices than we might have expected.
Together with a big chest, mouth, and huge nasal cavity, a big,
harsh, high, sound might have resulted. But, crucially, the anatomy
of the vocal tract is close enough to that of modern humans to
indicate that anatomically there was no reason why Neanderthal could
not have produced the complex range of sounds needed for speech.
Powerful, better adapted to the cold, and perhaps just as
intelligent - Neanderthal should have been invincible. So just how
are we here, and why is Neanderthal extinct?
Extinction
It seems that something much more random could have played a
significant role. About 45,000 years ago, the climate of Europe went
through a burst of very sudden switches between warm and cold
conditions that would have transformed the Neanderthals'
environment.
The forests on which they depended began to recede, giving way to
open plains. Here, Professor John Shea believes, the Neanderthal
thrusting spear and ambush strategy did not work. Neanderthals
retreated with the forests, their population falling as their
hunting grounds shrank.
By comparison, modern humans made lighter stone points that could
be fitted on to lighter spear shafts. These could be thrown,
enabling our ancestors to hunt more effectively in an open
landscape.
Hunting in an open landscape also required high levels of
mobility to follow migrating herds, and the agility to throw the
spears themselves. So the question for our team was: how did
Neanderthal stand up to our ancestors in agility?
Analysing the inner ear of a Neanderthal, Professor Fred Spoor,
from UCL, has discovered clues to Neanderthal's agility.
The semi-circular canals of the inner ear provide us with our
sense of balance, and by studying a range of animals, Spoor, has
found a high correlation between the size of the canals and agility.
Throughout human evolution, our canals seem to have increased in
size as our agility has increased.
But Neanderthals have smaller canals than modern humans, and even
earlier ancestors suggesting they were less agile.
Returning to the skeleton, Professor Trenton Holliday found an
explanation for this - that the short limbs and wide pelvis of our
Neanderthal would have resulted in less efficient locomotion than
modern humans.
The energy costs in travelling would have been higher, and this
would have been a serious evolutionary disadvantage.
For Neanderthal, it was an ironic end - the very body plan that
had made Neanderthal so well adapted to the ice age had locked him
into an evolutionary cul-de-sac.
He might have been better adapted to the cold than the first
modern humans, but as the landscape changed, it was our ancestors
who could take better advantage of the more open environment.
Neanderthal died and we survived to tell the tale.
Horizon is broadcast on BBC Two on Thursday, 10 February, at
2100GMT