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New Evidence of Neanderthal Violence
BBC | 4-22-2002 | Helen Biggs
Posted on 04/23/2002 6:06:24 PM EDT by blam
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/671495/posts

Neanderthal Man Floated Into Europe, Say Spanish Researchers
The Guardian (UK) | 1-16-2006 | Giles Tremlett
Posted on 01/16/2006 6:13:24 PM EST by blam
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1559199/posts

Neanderthal ‘butcher shop’ found in France
PhysOrg | September 27, 2006 | Staff
Posted on 09/28/2006 9:05:07 AM EDT by DaveLoneRanger
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1709879/posts

Stone Age Revolution:
Modern Humans May Have Divided Labor To Conquer
Science News | 11-4-2006 | Bruce Bower
Posted on 12/04/2006 3:38:58 PM EST by blam
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1748338/posts

Neanderthal Women Joined Men in the Hunt
(Eat your heart out, feminists)
The New York Times | December 5, 2006 | NICHOLAS WADE
Posted on 12/07/2006 8:42:12 AM EST by DaveLoneRanger
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1749820/posts

‘Post-Neanderthal Equality’
(Where is the next feminist revolution?)
Wall Street Journal | December 15, 2006 | Naomi Schaefer Riley
Posted on 12/15/2006 1:20:30 PM EST by Mrs. Don-o
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1754056/posts

Neanderthals on the Hunt
Archaeology | Volume 60 Number 2, March/April 2007 | unattributed (probably Mark Rose)
Posted on 02/19/2007 12:48:42 AM EST by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1787189/posts


20 posted on 02/09/2008 4:08:33 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______________________Profile updated Wednesday, January 16,)
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Reprise from 436. Re: Latest Neandertal DNA Study, dated March 29, 2000 06:36:06 EDT, my old "Ancient Times" group on "The Globe".
Ancient Food News - 48,000 BCE: Neandertal cutting implements manufactured in assembly line production on established cooking sites... Manuel Vaquero of Universitat Rovira i Virgili in Tarragona, Spain, has analyzed the spatial distribution of numerous Neandertal stone implements from two sediment layers in northeastern Spain's Abric Romani rock shelter, deducing a kind of workstation assembly line manufacture of small cutting instruments on established cooking sites there (Science News, 10/16/99, reporting on the September issue of Antiquity)

Carson I.A. Ritchie in Food in Civilization makes the most comprehensive case for the Neolithic invention of soup. "Evidence suggests that the Neaderthalers had evolved quite sophisticated cooking techniques. They were able to keep alive members of the group who were apparently either very elderly or lifelong invalids. The remains of one young man found near La-Chapelle-aux-Saints in France were those of a cripple who could have been of no use in hunting for the group. Another skeleton was that of an old man who had his teeth worn down to such an extent that he would have found it impossible to chew meat. There was no milk in those days, the food on which, in later times, old toothless people were kept alive. It seems at least likely that people of this sort were nourished on a diet of soup. Now the invention of soup making opened the door for all kinds of other sophisticated cookery.

What went on in the Neandertal kitchen is a matter for conjecture, but one sensible suggestion is that he boiled animals in their skins. The hide of a flayed animal would be suspended on forked sticks, filled with meat and water, and a fire lighted beneath it. After some time the water would boil, the meat would be cooked, and the broth could then be eaten by invalids. The skin would not catch fire with the heat because it would be cooked by the water. The experiment of boiling water in a bag made of fairly thick paper demonstrates that this kind of cooking is a practical idea. There can be no doubt that cooking in a skin took place in many parts of the world, and it was still being done in Ireland as late as the sixteenth century... Until recently, Icelanders used to steam their bread in the boiling water of the hot springs by simply wrapping it in some waterproof substance and then dangling it in the hot spring at the end of a rope...

Another way in which Neandertal extended his list of recipes was by using hot stones. The hot-stone technique meant the invesntion of frying. In addition, stones, heated to great heat on a campfire, could be transferred to any receptacle filled with water. A sufficiency of hot stones would induce the water to boil. [While] anthropologists have doubted the feasibility of primitive man's being able to pick the hot stones out of the fire... two stout poles, tied together with a thong, provide a pair of tongs with which even the hottest objects can be removed from a fire. This was the technique used by gun founders in Southeast Asia to remove pieces of slag from a furnace..." (Beaufort Books, 1981)
Tasteless joke time: if Neandertals really were speechless, what did they do when they had Tourette's Syndrome? ; )
Neandertal Architecture - Apart from making structures out of mammoth bones, Neandertals also made tents out of wood and animals skins. An example of this is at the French site of Terre Amata, which is 400,000 years old. These huts were extremely large, measuring to up to about twenty-five feet long and more than twelve feet wide (Tattersall 1995). In the inside of the hut, archaeologists found a fireplace, a hearth, numerous stone tools, and broken animal bones. Very few of the fauna found suggested that perhaps this could have been a butchering site.
It seems to me that since Neandertal preyed on creatures as large as the mammoth, butchering shelters might need to be built near the kill.
Stone Tools Made By Another Kind Of Human by Dr David Whitehouse - Scattered through the region, the team discovered 409 or remnants of prehistoric tools, including 14 associated with the mid- Palaeolithic period (between approximately 200,000 and 35,000 years ago). Most of these 14 stone tools are made using a technique usually associated with Neandertal man. The abundance of Neandertal stone tool remnants from the Palaeolithic period may help answer questions about the introduction of farming into Europe, Davis said. The Palaeolithic and Mesolithic periods, spanning from 750,000 to 11,000 years ago, represent a time before agriculture began. It was about 8,000 years ago that modern man's relatives in the Neolithic Age are known to have grown crops and domesticate animals.

Neandertalers were more muscular than ourselves, had large faces with long ridges on thick-boned skulls, were adept at working stone tools, were capable hunters and there are indications that they had a complex society with death rituals.
Neandertal built structures, manufactured tools and used them, interred their dead, probably had speech, [yet] were "another kind of human" and were not "modern man's relatives."
29 posted on 09/05/2008 8:43:44 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile hasn't been updated since Friday, May 30, 2008)
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