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Extreme Cooling Wiped Out Europe's First Humans

In times where heat waves are hitting the world, the idea of extreme cooling it would seem like a gift to some. Interestingly, Europe suffered a phenomenon of ....

United Kingdom , Iberian Peninsula , Portugal General , C Vasiliki Margari , Axel Timmermann , Atlantic Ocean , Europe Chronis Tzedakis , Juan Luis Arsuaga , National University , University College London , University Of Cambridge , Luis Arsuaga ,

Neanderthals could hear and produce speech like humans, scientists say


Neanderthals could hear and produce speech like humans, scientists say
Tom Batchelor
© Provided by The Independent
Neanderthals possessed the ability to hear and produce speech in a way that closely resembles modern-day humans’, a study has found.
Researchers used high-resolution CT scans to compare virtual 3D models of the ear structures in Homo sapiens and Neanderthals, our closest ancient human relatives, as well as analysing earlier fossils.
They found that far from the traditional notion of caveman grunts, Neanderthals had a similar capacity to produce the sounds of speech as modern humans and their hearing system was also as fine as ours, with ears that were “tuned” to perceive those frequencies. ....

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Could Early Hominins Hibernate? - Archaeology Magazine


MADRID, SPAIN According to a report in
The Guardian, an international team of researchers suggests that Neanderthals and other early hominins may have had the ability to hibernate. Juan-Luis Arsuaga of Complutense University of Madrid and Antonis Bartsiokas of Democritus University of Thrace say that lesions on 400,000-year-old Neanderthal fossils recovered from Atapuerca’s Sima de los Huesos cave resemble those seen on the remains of hibernating mammals. Such lesions are caused by disruptions in bone development brought on by limited food and reduced metabolic states. The remains of a hibernating cave bear have also been recovered from Sima de los Huesos, the researchers explained. Mammals would not have been able to survive on the limited food supply available during the harsh winters in northern Spain at the time. By contrast, modern Inuit and Sami people are able to make it through the winter by consuming fatty fish and reindeer. But critics point out that there may be ....

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