Sawyer relies much too heavily on the OoA "replacement" guys. And --- I know this is OT --- he has a "thing" about religious beliefs, so he makes his Neandertals "deficient" in a "religion" part of the brain, or something like that. But this doesn't really square with what is known about Neandertals, which at least suggests they had rituals of some kind.
Indeed Anne,
I had noticed that prejudice, even though this lack of religious endeavour attributed to Neanderthals didn't stop them to become highly developed from a cultural and scientific point of view, that is in the fiction imagined by Sawyer. Denis Lewis Williams, at least in his "The mind in the Cave" also denies religious behaviours to Neanderthals.
More generally and more in line of the discussion, it seems that Sawyers relied a lot upon not only on the "Out of Africa" hypothesis but also on the "cultural big bang" dear to Klein, Mithen Tattersal and other authors convinced that there was a genetic evolution, circa 50 to 40K years BP, allowing modern men to make a cultural quantum leap. They take as proof of that sudden evolution the emergence of extremely advanced art forms during the Aurignacian such as found in Chauvet Cave paintings or Vogelherd statuettes.
Several authors contest that position and have provided lots of evidence of the high level of development of Neanderthals culture (Baffier 1999, J. Jaubert 1999, J. L. Arsuaga 2001, F. d’Errico et Al 2003). I tend to agree with this second school of thoughts.
I have developed an argumentation that disconnects the apparition of highly representative art from a more in depth long term cultural evolution that started most likely during the Middle Palaeolithic and continued through to the Neolithic, as far as prehistory is concerned and probably later on but that is no longer in the scope of this discussion. I won't develop this hypothesis anymore here interested readers will find it by Clicking
here.
BTW, if you're interested in science fiction, I am working on three related S-F books(all related, but not a series, exactly), that all feature Neandertals as central characters. Currently I'm stumped on a chapter, so my work at present is going slowly.
Anne G
That's great I am impatient to read them.
Perhaps a discussion could be opened on the role of fiction books in the development of the public interest for palaeoanthropology... I don't know which board would be the best place though.
Yours very friendly.
Paul