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Front page News Sci/Tech Illness brought down early human rival: scientist

Illness brought down early human rival: scientist

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Infectious disease carried by Homo sapiens was responsible for the demise of the Neanderthal, according to a new theory

Scientists seeking to uncover the mystery of what happened to the Neanderthals should look to the modus operandi of another great die-off 30,000 years later, argues a Danish expert in an article submitted to the Journal of Archaeological Science.

In the article, professor emeritus Bent Sørensen of the University of Roskilde wrote that disease carried by Homo sapiens migrating out of Africa was responsible for the gradual extinction of our prehistoric cousins in the same way that European illnesses ravaged Native American populations in the sixteenth century.

‘Modern humans brought illnesses they could survive themselves, but for Neanderthals they were deadly,’ Sørensen said.

Sørensen’s article challenges the leading theories about why Neanderthals disappeared from Europe 30,000 years ago.

Those theories suggest that the stockier Neanderthals were unable to adapt to a changing climate or that they were killed off as humans encroached on their territory. But according to Sørensen, skeletal remains show no conclusive evidence that Neanderthals had been killed as a result of violence caused by humans.

He hopes efforts currently underway to map the DNA from the remains of a 38,000 year-old Neanderthal found in Croatia can uncover evidence to support his theory.

Similar methods, he said, have been used to identify tuberculosis in 5,000 year-old remains discovered in Egypt.

Comments
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jeannvk  - what we we do, but for scientists?   |2009-07-08 07:06:05
thought of this my self over 10 years ago ....

unfortuately, don't have a PHDor a goverment research grant.

This goes right along with an article regarding why chimpanzess didn't evolve as fast as humans....

( their DNA doesn't mutate at the same rate.)

and another article "How running made us human"

(natural selection; the slow ones never made it to the trees)
 

 

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