Did Large Eyes Lead To Neanderthals' Demise? 139
An anonymous reader writes "Bigger eyes and a corresponding greater allocation of the brain to process visual information is the most recent theory about the reasons that led to the extinction of Neanderthals, our closest relatives. Neanderthals split from the primate line that gave rise to modern humans about 400,000 years ago. This group then moved to Eurasia and completely disappeared from the world about 30,000 years back. Other studies have shown that Neanderthals might have lived near the Arctic Circle around 31,000 to 34,000 years ago."
Dupe (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Dupe (Score:5, Funny)
Seems slashdot editors have very large eyes as well
SIZE MATTERS (Score:2)
you know what they say about neanderthals with big eyes...
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They can see small things?
No, but they would have spotted this dupe a mile away...
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The Creature Walks Among Us
Starring samzenpus as the mongus.
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The Creature Walks Among Us
A staring samzenpus as the mongus.
FTFY
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Re:Dupe (Score:5, Funny)
Indeed. May as well carry on with other part of the tradition for dupe stories.
Quick everyone, re-post all the posts that have been modded up in the original story! Here comes free karma!
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I do wonder if the editors actually read Slashdot because I do and can remember stories from a couple of days ago.
Still, the headline is much better this time.
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Slashdot management, please remove and replace samzenpus.
Correlation vs causality. (Score:3, Insightful)
Neanderthals died out because they weren't smart enough. In other news, they had big eyes.
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Lies. Neanderthals live among us, just take a look at your co-workers.
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just take a look at your co-workers.
Or /. editors...
Re:Correlation vs causality. (Score:5, Funny)
I thought it was because they didn't know how to brew beer.
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Or it could have been the other way around: a handful of skilled Neanderthals could have taken out a village of less capable humans, and afterwards made off with their women (why not, right guys?).
Or they could have easily interacted with each other, lived among each other, and simply interbred.
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Or Homo Sapiens & Neanderthals interbred, and the hybrid offspring proved so be so superior to either of the parent species, that it completely replaced them.
Ask yourself, aside from relatively recent immigrants, are there any pure Homo Sapiens in the northern altitudes of Europe? Doesn't every European carry a percentage of Neanderthal DNA in them, no exceptions? I believe the Asians may be included in this as well (they also have some Neanderthal DNA in them), if I am remember an article I read recent
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We all carry "a percentage of neanderthal DNA" because we share well over 99% of our DNA with them. In fact, we share well over 90% with most mammals.
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But many apes survived in spite of not being smart enough and competing for the same biological niche (at some point). Why?
The answer is most likely in the energy requirement indeed. Homo Sapiens are exceptionally energy efficient, from our gastrointestinal tract which is optimized to eat cooked food (we lack entzymes needed to break down raw meat and pathogens it may contain properly for example) to our build (we lack a lot of musculature that Neanderthals had) to our sensory organs (we have terrible sense
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the fact that larger eyes led their brain resources to be spent
That's not a fact, it's wild speculation.
Size of the eyeball does not necessarily lead to a more complex nerve structure or supporting brain structure. It's entirely possible that they simply gathered more light. With all other factors equal, a larger eye would indicate better low-light vision... but also a lesser ability to track distant objects and focus on fine details. Which would make a lot more sense in terms of a significant disadvantage vs. Sapiens than some crackpot theory about robbing neural reso
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>Apparently just saying "correlation does not imply causation" gets you modded up now.
Correlation does not necessarily imply causation.
Re: Correlation vs causality. (Score:2)
If I had mod points for "funny"...
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Do you reckon they were too dumb to know the difference between size and power?
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Precisely. We don't know jack about how they lived, what their capabilities were, etc.
What we have had were attempts to use Neanderthals for racist stereotypes, to back up certain belief systems outside the realm of proper science. And now that we have found that white Europeans / Asians have Neanderthal DNA as part of their heritage, and Africans do not, I imagine that one of two things will happen: 1.) Denial, or 2.) a rehabilitation of the Neanderthal.
In any case, articles like these will continue to spo
Dupe (Score:5, Funny)
No. But perhaps if they had stuck around the large eyes would help the Slashdot editors spot their dupes.
http://science.slashdot.org/story/13/03/13/1247255/manga-girls-beware-extra-large-eyes-caused-neanderthals-demise [slashdot.org]
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No. But perhaps if they had stuck around the large eyes would help the Slashdot editors spot their dupes.
, yes but you are implying that the Neanderthals would do a better job than /. editors (not a hard thing to do obviously), but that means that the Neanderthals would outcompete the /. editors and then would there be a /. in the future, implying that smaller eyes of /. editors caused their demise and the victory for the Neanderthals? Unless of-course the Neanderthals are already running /. and are trying to hide in the open, by pretending not to see the dupes so that we would not think they have big eyes. B
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obviously that's "breeding" program not "breading" program, unless the Neanderthals want to bake bread and cookies out of humans.
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Perhaps that is a little closer to reality. Neanderthals included homo sapiens in their dietary regime and homo sapiens where far more effective at mass retaliatory revenge attacks. So the mass homo sapiens opposition to cannibalism could stem from a history of being preyed upon by Neanderthals and their larger war party attacks against those that would kill and eat them.
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The difference is homo sapiens could see beyond their own hamlet, to surrounding hamlets and the image of a tribe gained dominance over just the hamlet. Thus several hamlets hunting parties could form together to create a war party and this war party could specifically target and eliminate threats to all the hamlets that formed the tribe. So whilst less physically able individually they were able to attack with superior number and over an extended time, beyond normal hunting patterns.
Modern day aborigina
Re:Obligatory Dupe (Score:2)
obviously that's "breeding" program not "breading" program, unless the Neanderthals want to bake bread and cookies out of humans.
Are these cookies made from real Girl Scouts?
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Well, you think the Neanderthals have such discriminating exquisite taste that they would be able to tell the difference between cookies baked with Girl Scouts rather than with, let's say US Congressmen?
I hope the Neanderthals go for the Congressmen first and leave the Girl Scouts for dessert.
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obviously that's "breeding" program not "breading" program, unless the Neanderthals want to bake bread and cookies out of humans.
Are these cookies made from real Girl Scouts?
Mine are. But only the ones with real mince meat fillings.
Eloi and Morlocks (Score:3)
unless the Neanderthals want to bake bread and cookies out of humans.
That depends on what happens over the next 800 millennia [wikipedia.org].
If you had seen (Score:1, Funny)
the BIG TITS of Neanderthal women you'd have had BIG EYES too. Neanderthal tits were big but tough as leather. I know. I married one.
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How many faces to you see in his wife's tits?
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Hopefully, only his.
Hope his wife likes motorboating.
Disappeared? (Score:4, Insightful)
Neanderthals didn't disappear. As a distinct culture they "disappeared" from the archaeological record, but that certainly doesn't mean Neanderthals disappeared from existence. A big chunk of the world's population have a significant proportion of Neanderthal genes. You can't say a population went extinct if their descendants are still alive!
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You can't say a population went extinct if their descendants are still alive!
Dinosaurs and birds spring to mind. Are you saying the dinosaurs aren't extinct because modern birds are very likely to be their descendants?
Re:Disappeared? (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, the more we learn about bird/dinosaur similarities, the more it seems like dinosaurs aren't extinct.
The genetics between birds and dinosaurs are very few.
So, scientifically speaking, saying dinosaurs are extinct isn't entirely correct, or rather, almost meaningless since dinosaur isn't a very well-defined scientific term.
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Many Synapsids would be identified by most people as "dinosaurs" and a few of their descendents are still around today and using slashdot ...
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You can't say a population went extinct if their descendants are still alive!
Dinosaurs and birds spring to mind. Are you saying the dinosaurs aren't extinct because modern birds are very likely to be their descendants?
Walking in to the aviary at the local zoo with Richard Attenborough saying "Welcome to Avifaunic Park" just doesn't seem to have the same ring to it.
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They were our ancestors!
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Belief is not a reason to disregard logical possibilities.
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Yes you can if the species is entirely gone. The "hard definition" is can to individuals breed and produce fertile offspring. So while we may have some of their DNA still in our population mostly they are now considered to be a district species, so they are extinct. An interesting question is could you breed a Neanderthal and a modern person, and would the offspring be fertile, I wounded if we are different species under the older firmer definition.
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An interesting question is could you breed a Neanderthal and a modern person, and would the offspring be fertile, I wounded if we are different species under the older firmer definition.
Most African people don't have Neanderthal DNA, so they would be the true 'modern person' if by that one means 'a continuous non-Neanderthal genetic line from the 400,000-year split'. The Neanderthals and descendants of the African people interbred, so non-African people are either a new breed or Neanderthals that took on
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-1, Copypasta
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pasta? really? from where?
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[......]who won the Six Nations at the weekend?
Neanderthals?
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You could test them, but I suspect ovine DNA might cause odd results, isnit.
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I don't have time to cite references right now, but one of the more interesting theories I saw involved RH factor (the gene that determines whether you're A+/B+/AB+/O+ or A-/B-/AB-/O-. Apparently, RH-negative women have a MUCH higher chance of dying in childbirth if the baby is RH-positive. Suppose, for a moment, that in the very beginning, Neanderthal women were universally RH-negative, and Homo Sapiens (men and women) moving into Europe from Africa were universally RH-positive.
Assume that for whatever rea
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Neanderthals weren't a distinct culture. They were a different species from our ancestors at the time.
A big chunk of the world's population have a significant proportion of Neanderthal genes.
Citation needed. I studied Anthropology in the 90s, and I don't think there's credible proof that modern humans have Neanderthal genes in any significant amount, or that Neanderthals mated with our ancestors at all.
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Neanderthals weren't a distinct culture. They were a different species from our ancestors at the time.
A big chunk of the world's population have a significant proportion of Neanderthal genes.
Citation needed. I studied Anthropology in the 90s, and I don't think there's credible proof that modern humans have Neanderthal genes in any significant amount, or that Neanderthals mated with our ancestors at all.
Mice genes on the other hand ...
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Mice genes on the other hand ...
Huh?
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http://articles.cnn.com/2002-12-04/tech/coolsc.coolsc.mousegenome_1_human-genome-new-human-genes-genes-that-cause-disease?_s=PM:TECH [cnn.com]
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Ugh. I was worried this is where you were going with that comment. We need better science education.
This clearly doesn't apply to the discussion on Neanderthal genes. Mice and Humans have shared genes due to our common ancestors, but we have no Mice genes in our genome. Similarly, we obviously would not have any Neanderthal genes unless our ancestral species mated with them (if it was even possible).
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TV said.
Also - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neanderthal_genome_project [wikipedia.org]
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This is so "well known" it was even covered on Nova.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/evolution/decoding-neanderthals.html [pbs.org]
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"Are you claiming the neanderthals are simply hiding in the trees?"
Not necessarily. They have jobs in the Sasquatch, Yeti and Bigfoot tourist industry.
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Have you ever seen a Neanderthal hiding in a tree? See how well it works!
I'll bet they didn't see that coming... (Score:2)
big eyes (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:big eyes (Score:5, Funny)
Night vision, arctic circle (Score:2)
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Inuit are generally considered to be northern Asians who crossed into North America in quite recent times ...They are not particularly distinct genetically ...
Ice Climbers (Score:2)
Inuit are generally considered to be northern Asians
I guess that's why the Ice Climbers from Super Smash Bros. series don't look much different from the default "stateless" race of Japanese cartoon characters [tvtropes.org].
Neanderthalians vs aliens (Score:1)
The neanderthals didn't extinct. They lost all their hair, lot of weight, their eyes got even bigger and they were transformed into grey aliens. Well, at least some of them. The rest got sick and turned green. That's why we don't find neanderthals fossils lately: they are all in UFOs.
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"That's why we don't find neanderthals fossils lately: they are all in UFOs."
But one question remains: Did they eat the pudding?
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"The neanderthals didn't extinct."
Extinct is a verb now?
" They lost all their hair, lot of weight, their eyes got even bigger and they were transformed into grey aliens."
The grey aliens are the Asgard - they were around elsewhere in the galaxy long before any Homo Sapiens including Neanderthals were on earth
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Deep breath. (Score:1)
DUP... oh, too late, never mind.
Sits on a bit of a shaky premise (Score:1)
Oh how cute (Score:2)
Dice is trying to revive the old Slashdot by upping the frequency of dupes.
Do the editors even *read* Slashdot? (Score:3)
It feels to me like the editors never actually look at the site, and they have such short memory that they become useless as editors.
Huh? (Score:1)
No, but... (Score:2)
No, but small brains lead to posting duplicate stories: . http://science.slashdot.org/story/13/03/13/1247255/manga-girls-beware-extra-large-eyes-caused-neanderthals-demise [slashdot.org] [slashdot.org]
"We couldn't let them live ... (Score:2)
Send samzenpus back for more training please (Score:4, Insightful)
I rarely comment on /. innner workings but honestly, samzenpus needs some retraining. Last night it was the 'microsoft killing windows phone' fantasy headline.. now an obvious dupe.. among quite a few others of recent vintage.
Psst (Score:2)
Nobody cares.
Not about the original article or whether it was correct.
In latest news, jury is still out (Score:2)
"Neanderthals may not have been able to coordinate such a large social group as modern humans".
It is quite possible that modern humans are not able to coordinate as large social groups as they now have to. No system of government or economic management has yet been proven over a long enough period to engender confidence. For example, no system of paper money has ever lasted more than a century or so without undergoing catastrophic inflation. We are just about getting to the critical point - and it shows.
Nei
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You're going to need to define "catastrophic" inflation, because we certainly have paper money systems that are more than a century old and still working. The US dollar alone is 228 years old, and the Great British Pound is approaching 300 years old. Have they had inflation over time? Yes, in fact that's considered normal and healthy for a currency. Have they had periods of increase
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You're going to need to define "catastrophic" inflation, because we certainly have paper money systems that are more than a century old and still working. The US dollar alone is 228 years old, and the Great British Pound is approaching 300 years old. Have they had inflation over time? Yes, in fact that's considered normal and healthy for a currency. Have they had periods of increased inflation, yes, but never so bad as to wipe out people's savings like with some other currencies (examples include the German Mark after WW1 and the Ruble after the fall of communism in the former Soviet Union).
The US dollar and the pound sterling have experienced what I would consider seriously harmful inflation. In the last 100 years, each of them has lost almost all its value. It's notoriously hard to arrive at a fair comparison, but if you stick to things like loaves of bread, bottles of wine, horses, clothes, houses, etc. one pound today is worth something like a penny in 1913 - a fall in value of about 99.6 percent. I consider that catastrophic for individuals, and over time for institutions too.
To zoom in o
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They didn't have any beer (Score:1)
burp
False dichotomy between visual and reasoning (Score:2)
Re: Our study provides a more direct approach by estimating how much of their brain was allocated to cognitive functions, including the regulation of social group size; a smaller size for the latter would have had implications for their level of social complexity and their ability to create, conserve and build on innovations.
As a visual thinker myself, much of my "idea processing" is visual. (I come from a long line of professional artists and cartoonists.) I create little visual mental models to emulate an
It did for this guy (Score:2)