The
demise1 of Neanderthals may have nothing to do with
innovative2 hunting weapons carried by humans from west Asia, according to a new study published in the Journal of Human Evolution. The researchers, from Nagoya University and The University of Tokyo, Japan, say their findings mean that we may need to rethink the reasons humans survived Neanderthals -- and that we may not have behaved as differently as we thought. The researchers looked at innovative stone weapons used by humans about 42,000-34,000 years ago. Traditionally, anthropologists believed that innovation in weapons enabled humans to spread out of Africa to Europe. However, the new study suggests that the innovation was not a driving force for humans to migrate into Europe as
previously3 thought -- they were no better equipped than the Neanderthals.
"We're not so special, I don't think we survived Neanderthals simply because of
technological4 competence," said Dr. Seiji Kadowaki, first author of the study from Nagoya University, Japan. "Our work is related to the processes behind the global spread of modern humans, and specifically the cultural impact of the modern humans who migrated to Europe."
Anatomically modern humans expanded the
geographic5 area they inhabited out of Africa during a period of time 55,000-40,000 years ago -- this event made a huge impact on the biological origin of people living today. There are other theories for the
geographical6 spread of anatomically modern humans, but this is generally accepted as a major event in human history.
Previous models assumed that anatomically modern humans -- our direct ancestors -- were special in the way they behaved and thought. These models considered technological and cultural innovation as the reason humans survived and Neanderthals did not.
There has always been a big question around the demise of the Neanderthals -- why did they disappear when humans survived? We have a similar
anatomy7, so researchers traditionally thought there must have been differences in the way Neanderthals and humans behaved. The new study suggests that humans moved from west Asia to Europe without a big change in their behavior.
The researchers studied stone tools that were used by people in the Early Ahmarian culture and the Protoaurignacian culture, living in south and west Europe and west Asia around 40,000 years ago. They used small stone points as tips for hunting weapons like throwing spears. Researchers previously considered these to be a significant innovation -- one that helped the humans migrate from west Asia to Europe, where Neanderthals were living.