This research is
what was behind chapters 13 through 15 and explains my thinking on where they
existed, their speech, and an unusual part of their diet.
Chapter 13
The author:
Neanderthals roamed Europe and Asia, but there is no evidence they ever made it
to the Americas. I do not believe the full extent of their range has yet been
discovered. In February of 2008, a discovery in Greece led Eleni Panagopoulou,
of the Paleoanthropology-Speleology Department of Southern Greece to say, “Our
findings prove that…their settlement networks were broader and more organized
than we believed.” New discoveries will continue to be made and more will
continue to be learned about the Neanderthals.
For instance, the
recent discovery in a Gibraltar cave point to Neanderthals being there only
24,000 years ago, 2,000 years later than previously believed.
…charcoal samples
from the cave, called Gorham’s Cave in Gibraltar, are about 28,000 years old
and maybe just 24,000 years old.
Associated Press
September 14, 2006
The author again:
It’s possible that the body disposal system used for Kung and others would
explain the absence of skeletal remains in the Americas. The earliest artifacts
found in North America were probably deposited long after the areas were in
habited.
Chapter 14 – tree
ferns
There are perhaps
nearly a thousand treefern species which grow chiefly in the Southern
Hemisphere and the tropics. Many of these are quite cold-tender and will
suffer if the temperature drops below freezing. But a few … are
cold-hardy enough to adapt to a less hospitable climate.
From
http://www.angelfire.com/bc/eucalyptus/treeferns/
Tree fern frond
("fiddlehead")
by the Akatarawa River, New Zealand.
These unopened fronds are edible but must be roasted first to remove shikimic
acid.
Wikipedia at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_fern
Chapter 15 – speech
Neanderthals, an
archaic human species that dominated Europe until the arrival of modern humans
some 45,000 years ago, possessed a critical gene known to underlie speech,
according to DNA evidence retrieved from two individuals excavated from El
Sidron, a cave in northern Spain.
The new evidence
stems from analysis of a gene called TOXP2 which is associated with language.
The New York
Times, Neanderthals Had Important Speech Gene, DNA Evidence Shows, by
Nicholas Wade, October 19, 2007
1 comment:
I take it from your words that you're not referring to the afectionally known as Neanderthals a/k/a husbands.
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