Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Téléchargement PDF The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni

Téléchargement PDF The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni

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The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni

The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni


The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni


Téléchargement PDF The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni

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The Neanderthals rediscovered : How modern science is rewriting their story, by Dimitra Papagianni

Détails sur le produit

Broché: 208 pages

Editeur : Thames & Hudson Ltd; Édition : Revised and updated edition (1 septembre 2015)

Langue : Anglais

ISBN-10: 0500292043

ISBN-13: 978-0500292044

Dimensions du produit:

13,5 x 1,8 x 20,3 cm

Moyenne des commentaires client :

4.0 étoiles sur 5

2 commentaires client

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[…]The timeline is not always very clear but let’s put some order in what we get, at times scattered over the pages and chapters. Some humans – it would be more accurate to say Hominins – left Africa two million years ago and reached South East Asia then. That’s fundamental but it is said once page 20 and it will never be exploited anymore. One million years ago the first humans – Hominins would be better here too – entered Europe. Note these very earlier Hominin migrations are not specified. We assume these Hominins were Homo Erectus, though these Homo Erectus were probably less evolved in South East Asia than in Europe. But this is not specified. The authors say that this timeline is going to be repeated for modern humans who will reach South East Asia, and even Australia by the way, before they reach Europe. The times appear to be in hundred thousand years, but it is not clear because the first migration to North Africa is not stated and this one happened long before the two the authors quote. We can assume there were then in North Africa some Homo Ergaster or even Homo Erectus left along the Mediterranean after they moved out of Africa altogether, and the Homo Sapiens who moved from Black Africa to North Africa found these older Hominins and in a way or another they integrated the modern human arriving communities or were caused to become extinct the same way it happened in Black Africa, in several ten thousand years somewhere around 200,000 years ago, or earlier. These earlier surviving Hominins had only one choice, to integrate or just become extinct. That’s the main difference with Black Africa where the older Hominins evolved into Homo Sapiens and thus disappeared by becoming Homo Sapiens. North Africa was different. This first migration – and the authors do not say a word about it because their Hominins are mute, do not speak – covers the territories where today all Semitic languages are traditionally spoken. It would be interesting to ask WHY?The authors then shift to Europe and Neanderthals. The first Neanderthal traits appeared, they say, around 500,000 years ago and the Neanderthal distinctive form is stabilized around 250,000 years ago, and they clearly say in Europe. They say that they evolved from a certain Homo Heidelbergensis, but they do not specify if these Heidelbergensis migrated to Europe before or if they descended from an older Hominin, Homo Erectus for example. This unspecified origin becomes very fuzzy when they actually bring up the hypothesis that these Homo Heidelbergensis could have migrated to Africa later on, implying that Homo Sapiens could have evolved from them. That sounds greatly debatable. I would favor rather the evolution of Homo Erectus in Europe and in Africa along the same phylogenetic line and the traits of Homo Heidelbergensis could then have been produced both in Europe and in Africa (maybe in Asia too but we are not up-to-date about Asia), and these Hominins were rather evolving fast, hence they were not particularly stable and they evolved in more advanced Hominins, Homo Neanderthals for example in Europe if we accept the authors’ hypothesis. In Africa they may have been pockets of mutating Hominins who did not survive, who became extinct fast because of the competition with other Hominins around them, or the evolution there produced now and then some Heidelbergensis traits that have survived archaeologically though they had no future at the time because the evolution to Homo Sapiens was more dynamic and stronger.. What I want to insist on here is that if you state Neanderthals evolved in Europe you have to state the presence before them of an older Hominin and you have to specify how these older Hominins arrived there in Europe to evolved later on into Neanderthals, assuming what is accepted by everyone that Hominins initially evolved in Black Africa. The authors do not say much on this question that remains misty.Then the authors state the expansion of Neanderthals in Europe and their migrating to the Middle East around 130,000 years ago. Since they know all non-African natives have Neanderthal genes (3 to 5%) and we should also speak of the fact that all Asians, hence a good proportion of all Native Americans, have some genes from Denisovans: one contribution for Southeast Asians and two contributions for the Chinese, and some Denisovan jaws were found recently in Tibet expanding tremendously their territory and explaining why they transmitted a gene to the later Homo Sapiens in the Himalayas that enables them to live at high altitudes. The Denisovans evolved from the same genetic basis as Neanderthals and they could not have evolved from Homo Heidelbergensis. So, we here have a problem. Denisovans seem to have evolved from some Homo Erectus but along their own line, which implies natural selection enables each evolving group to adapt to their local conditions. But to come back to the genetic exchanges between Homo Sapiens and Homo Neanderthalensis it must have taken place in the Middle East (the vast Middle East that includes Iran and Pakistan) because all Homo Sapiens going out of Black Africa will eventually, one way or another, cross the Middle East and stay there for some time before moving on.But the book is very disappointing on this subject. If we still today carry 3 to 5% of Neanderthal genes, that means there was some inbreeding, but then the children and probably their mothers were integrated in Homo Sapiens communities, hence taken away from Neanderthal communities, hence depriving Neanderthals from the new genes necessary not to genetically decline (inbreeding) and what’s more, some of the women were taken away. I can say – and here gynecologists and pediatricians would be useful – because Hominins having from the very start broken the natural rule of reproducing to the level permitted by locally available resources, which enabled them to expand and thus to fuel the migrations, to become and then be a migrating species, but not migrating like migrating animals. Migrating in order to conquer new territories and new resources. To do that with species that were fertile from 13 onward up to death with a life expectancy of 29 years, the women had to be pregnant many times (8 to 10 times at least). Only this level of procreation could guarantee the community to have three adults born from each woman, understanding infantile death, death when delivering for the mothers, predators against young children or babies, accidents, and of course diseases, not to mention death of men and women before the normal life expectancy of the species, all these and even some more (like sterility for some women) might have reduced the procreative level of women on the average. That means as soon as 13 years old, all women, all at once, were pregnant, had a child they were breastfeeding for twelve to fifteen months, and one or two other children who needed some care, as long as they were alive. That is only possible if women are the beneficiaries of a sexual division of labor. Women collectively take care of children and since one woman can breastfeed two children or three from time to time, the mothers could rotate in that childcare and those who were freed from child care for the day could do other things, and one thing women did was paint the caves (proved both in Europe and Indonesia in the same historical period) in which they lived, or buried their dead, or contacted the spirits from the other side of reality. With that logic in mind, the hybrid Sapiens-Neanderthal child was kept by the Homo Sapiens community, and the mother, it the Neanderthal parent was the mother, moved along to be able to take care of the child. That was I think an important cause of the decline of Neanderthals. Some today speak of a decline of fertility among Neanderthals. This becomes very simple then. The hybrid children were integrated into Homo Sapiens communities and in three or four generations their specific Neanderthal genes got diluted to reach today 3 to 5%.In spite of what the authors say, in spite of the new time measuring with new techniques that can finally reach beyond the 40,000-year deadlock of carbon reading, we still have a lot of re-measuring to do but the overlapping period must have been at least a few thousand years and maybe even ten thousand years, as researchers in Bordeaux say.Then we come to the question of the brains of Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens. The authors repeat all the time that the size of the brain is similar or even bigger for Neanderthals. They never mention the fact that the size of the brain has to be measured in proportion with the mass of the body, what we call Encephalization quotient (EQ). I have calculated that the bigger brain of Neanderthals is in fact 11% smaller in EQ than Homo Sapiens’ brain. They insist on the fact that Homo Sapiens is slender, an expert runner over long distance and can run-hunt animals they can bring down to exhaustion, though the running hunters don’t reach that point of exhaustion, maybe because they could relay along the way from one runner to another, which would have implied a lot of planning to foresee the route the animal was going to be chased into. They insist on the shape of the Neanderthal brain that is flatter meaning with probably less cortex, particularly in the frontal area where the skull is definitely flatter and that’s the frontal lobe that contains the famous Broca area that is the coordinating area for all complex activities that require a lot of coordination among many organs, muscles, and limbs. One particularly complex activity is breathing for a long-distance runner, and this coordination concerns the various organs that will collaterally produce speech. We can then assume that, since Neanderthals cannot run long distance because his Broca area is flattened, he cannot coordinate complex activities with his hand and thus cannot improve his stone tool production, and cannot produce the same articulated language as Homo Sapiens, not to speak of the jaw structure that may make some consonants difficult to pronounce.That explains why I am not satisfied with formulas like “complex speech” or “have language.” Language has a phylogeny and this phylogeny cannot be negated because if that phylogeny is not respected, human articulated language will never be produced. First, before even the first articulation Hominins must be able to rotate vowels and consonants, so with four or five consonants and three or four vowels monkeys actually produce seven or eight calls, but humans can produce up to five power four items of the simple pattern CVC, hence 625 items. And it is this rich capability that leads Hominins, and of course Homo Sapiens at the top, to the first articulation: each item becomes a word attached to a referred entity outside the brain. And it is only when this articulation is reached that the next ones can be envisaged: first differentiating spatial hence nominal items from temporal hence verbal items and articulating one nominal item with one verbal item. That’s the basic sentence structure. But to produce a rich sentence and not a two-word sentence like two-year-old children, we have to invest into the various nominal elements functions (the relationships between each nominal element and the verbal element at the center of the sentence), and the tense and mood conjugation into the verbal elements. Language thus grows after the rotation of vowels and consonants, and because of it, from root to stem to foliage from the first to the third articulations. And this Is essential when connected to the three migrations out of Black Africa. The first one around 200,000 years ago to North Africa (all first-articulation Semitic root-languages), the second around 130,000 years ago to the whole of Asia meeting Denisovans there (all second-articulation isolating stem-languages), and the third around 80,000-50,000 years ago in two waves (all third articulation agglutinative Turkic frond-languages, and then third-articulation synthetic-analytical Indo-European and Indo-Aryan frond-languages).The authors consider that the development of the handaxe is the real turning point among Hominins demonstrating their creativity and in a way their capability at planning the future. I would add that it is also the revealing element that requires a certain level of communication and social organization. I would add that migrating is for me the real turning point that required a social organization and a level of communication implying some linguistic code for this migrating to be simply possible. Then the authors follow, without calling it phylogenic, the phylogeny of stone tools and weapons, hence of a typically human technology developed by human Hominins. This handaxe is connected to Homo Erectus but may have been developed before by Homo Habilis. We must understand one species developed from the previous one or ones and inherited the previous species’ knowledge and know-how, which proves there is some linguistic code involved there. The book is clear that Neanderthals developed a certain level of stone tools beyond the handaxe, but they were not able to go beyond this Levallois and then at most some Mousterian technology. The next phase was developed by the Aurignacian Homo Sapiens (the best-known one is Cro-Magnon) arriving in Europe and then further on by the Gravettians. The authors seem to believe the Gravettians were a new Homo Sapiens migration (the second after the Aurignacians) though they do not see that Homo Sapiens like other Hominins before them developed one technology from the previous one, hence in a continuous movement, just the same way the genetic mutations produced one Hominin species from the previous one. In this case, Homo Sapiens did not develop from Neanderthals (or Denisovans) but from another Hominin species seen as either common to the three species (hence Homo Erectus) or slightly diversified by an intermediary evolution like Homo Heidelbergensis or Homo Ergaster. Note we do not have this intermediary in Asia, and we do not need it since Homo Sapiens in Asia, like in Europe came from Black Africa. The authors state the handaxe that became “common in East Africa and Asian west of the Himalayas’ took more time to become common with the “European pioneers [who] did not use [it] until 500,000 years ago.” First, this clearly states that it was a Homo Erectus invention in Africa and it spread to Asia when Homo Erectus spread to Asia. But since we cannot state there was any communication between Asia and Europe, we have to consider it was brought to Europe by Homo Erectus when he came to Europe from Africa and this implies the first Hominins (at the genetic level of Homo Erectus) arrived in Europe around 500,000 years ago but it is in contradiction with the fact that the first Neanderthal traits appeared in Europe at the same date, which implies it is Neanderthals that brought the handaxe. But then what about Homo Heidelbergensis? It is such elements that are missing here and there in this book. We can only draw them from various remarks scattered around in the chapters. This is yet essential to understand that there is a continuity in this evolution that proves the existence of a phylogeny in such technological evolution and the existence of a transmission of technological heritage from one species to the next, hence of a code that enables that transmission, and what’s more the evolution that goes along with this transmission.We have the same problem with the case of “cannibalism.” This word is the wrong word for the phenomenon the authors are speaking of. Hominins eating Hominin flesh and probably bone marrow and brains. Cannibalism is a modern concept invented after human sacrifice was banned in Mediterranean society (check Abraham and his son), though it was replaced by public executions and gladiator games by the Romans, and note it was transformed into a rite of eating the body and drinking the blood of Jesus Christ still in the Roman Empire after Emperor Constantine. This practice of Hominins eating Hominins is another negation of nature. Very few animal species eat their own members, and yet only after death, some kind of species-self-scavenging along with the principle of waste-not-want-not. This is then the second natural law Hominins negate after having negated the natural law of only procreating the children the local resources can support. The eating of the flesh, bone-marrow and brains of dead Hominins, even of sacrificed Hominins is ritualized, for one, and justified by some belief, the most common belief being that you can recuperate the qualities of the dead ones by eating them. We have to note that eating the ritualized “bread” and drinking the ritualized “wine” are for any Christian of any affiliation eating Jesus’ body and drinking Jesus’ blood. This is nothing but ritualized “cannibalism.” That is supposed to give you the purity of Jesus, the divine purity and the divine light of Jesus. To call such an act “cannibalism” is absolutely off the point and even non-empathetic. It is the same for old Hominins. That enables the individuals in the tribe, and the tribe per se, to concentrate the qualities of a class, group, family, clan, etc. It can protect you against dangers in life, and if the eaten person is an enemy who was captured, tortured and sacrificed (put to death) then at times dismembered and the pieces distributed to the various members of the tribe to be cooked and eaten, that should enable you and the tribe not to be attacked anymore by this enemy. Both a ritual that is in a way magic and psychological on the side of the eater, and symbolical in the form of fear on the side of the enemy tribe. The practice of impaling by Vlad Count Dracula and by the Ottomans or the Bey of Algiers a long time ago, or the crucifixion systematically used by the Romans had exactly the same objective: a warning. That’s what is going to happen to you if you attack us. So, eating the flesh, bone-marrow and brains of an enemy is both a religious ritual and a clear military and political warning. The hearts of the sacrificed Mayas were at times eaten by the elite rulers and priests performing the sacrifice. To call that cannibalism is to miss the point.There is, in fact, a third case of the negation of a natural rule. All, or at least most, mammal species would naturally avoid in-breeding. Yet in some human societies, inbreeding is the rule among rulers like Pharaohs. This in-breeding of brothers and sisters is genetically absurd, and yet it is practiced supposedly to concentrate the qualities of the concerned bloodline. I would even say that one brother killing another brother is also quite common in many religions and mythologies. Think simply of the Bible (Abel and Cain) or of Egypt (Seth and Osiris). We have the same pattern in many civilizations in all continents. It is some kind of brotherly sacrifice necessary to bring up the next phase of history. We might say today it is incest. But this is false because in these civilizations these brotherly sacrifices are regenerating and bringing a new stage of development. It is quite obvious with the subsequent conflict of Isis versus Seth and the fate of Horus, the postmortem-procreated son of Osiris and Isis. But Cain is the founder of the metal civilization and technology, as well as of music in the Bible. Music will only be fully integrated by King David with the instating of the Levite school of music. All that is to say that in archaeology we are not supposed to be anachronistic because then we do not understand what we are speaking of.[…]Dr. Jacques COULARDEAU

J'ai toujours été passionnée de neanderthal et ce livre me permet de répondre à de nombreuses questions mais également de faire rêverL'exactitude scientifique mêlé au ton sympathique de la narratrice font qu'il est très plaisant à lireIl y a énormément d'illustrations et même quelques pages glacées en couleurBref très beau livre que je recommande aux férus de neanderthals

Thoroughly enjoyable read. Highly recommended. Why?1. This nonfiction work reads like a novel. Delightful descriptions include:"If modern humans look like football (soccer) players, the Neanderthals were more akin to rugby players."Transitions like "Towards the end of the Boxgrove project, a new discovery rattled the archaeological world once again" kept the narrative moving. And yes, there is a narrative to this Neanderthal story throughout history. The book is organized chronologically, building from ancient ancestors through Neanderthals to "modern humans."2. Terrific Maps and Photographs: Each chapter has a map of the world with the archeological sites that are discussed in that chapter designated. There are many diagrams of stone tools and even more photographs of caves and excavation sites. These visuals supplement the text in a powerful way.3. Up-to-Date Research: The authors clearly made extraordinary efforts to include the latest research and discuss what it all means.Well-written, fascinating!

Without being an authority on ancient humans, I have always been a proponent of Neanderthal culture. They have consistently been depicted as clearly subhuman, both in academic works and in fiction. Now we have an account of the latest research, which credits them with language and with enough culture to bury their dead, decorate their bodies symbolically, and invent new tools. They needed all that, and more, to survive as big-game hunters in Ice Age Europe. The authors also have interesting things to say about the reasons Neanderthals finally became extinct, after coexisting with anatomically modern humans for thousands of years.

I bought Neanderthals Rediscovered to catch up on the progress of Neanderthal studies after decades of neglect. I highly recommend this book to everyone, but especially to anyone seeking an introduction to the topic. The Neanderthals are situated in the context of their predecessors and their contemporaries, which eventually included our own "modern" and frequently murderous variety of hominid. The discussion of tools used by Neanderthals and others is particularly good, as is the discussion of Neanderthal ecology in cyclic ice ages. The topic of cannibalism, which seems to be politically incorrect, is discussed and evidence is cited. One chapter reviews films and novels about Neanderthals. It is clear to me that it is time for a new wave of Neanderthal and archaic human novels and videos that takes recent research into account, perhaps starring an Ice Woman, who on thawing out will speak something more sophisticated than "junk Neanderthal."

I shouldn't be, but I am always amazed by how ideas and interpretations of things, both historical or scientific, change through generations of researchers. (I feel safe in making this statement because I have been reading for at least 60+ years.) This happens not only because of progressive technologies but also from the influences of prevailing cultural viewpoints. The authors of this book have taken both of these stances in hand by describing what is now archeologically relevant to the understanding of Neanderthals. It gives brief but pertinent overviews of the historical timelines of discovery and addresses the human and academic biases often associated with these archaic humans. This is a plus since some of us have had our DNA tested for the presence of Neanderthal genes. It's just the right size to carry; the writing is excellent and to the point; illustrations are concise and informative. It is academic but also practical and without jargon.

Well written and very up to date overview of Neanderthals and the emergence of modern man. The authors use Recent DNA studies are used to sort out origins of fossils. But they also give excellent explanations of how stone tools are made and how they identify different early cultures. So much has been written on early man and often scientists differ on the meaning of the evidence --these authors help sort out what is generally accepted and what is still disputed. There is a good discussion of the reasons for the disappearance of Neanderthals and the impact of modern man on this question, without taking a firm position on this important question.Recommended.

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