…or miscellaneous speculations on “…if Neanderthals were so smart, why did they go extinct?”
Jacques Cinq-Mars
Smithsonian Magazine, June 2003
Rethinking Neanderthals
Research suggests the so-called brutes fashioned tools, buried their dead, maybe cared for the sick and even conversed. But why, if they were so smart, did they disappear?
BurialIn rolling farm country 280 miles southwest of Paris, Bruno Maureille, an anthropologist at the University of Bordeaux, oversees the excavation of a site called Les Pradelles, where for three decades researchers have been uncovering, fleck by fleck, the remains of humanity's most notorious relatives, the Neanderthals.
Studded with fossilized reindeer bones and other relics, the site, Maureille tells Smithsonian contributor Joe Alper, was probably a butchery where Neanderthals processed the results of what appear to have been very successful hunts. That finding alone is significant, because paleo-anthropologists have long viewed Neanderthals as too dull and too clumsy to use efficient tools, never mind organize a hunt and divvy up the game. But this site, along with others across Europe and in Asia, is helping overturn the familiar conception of Neanderthals as dumb brutes. Recent studies suggest they were imaginative enough to carve artful objects and perhaps clever enough to invent a language.
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