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Cooling, Drying Climate May Have
Led to Neanderthal Disappearance
A
new study suggests that ancient periods of cold and dry climate helped
our species take the place of Neanderthals in Europe.
Researchers found that such cold periods happened at the same time
Neanderthals seemed to disappear in different parts of the continent.
Their disappearance was followed by the appearance of our species: Homo
sapiens.
Neanderthals are a species of early humans that once lived in Europe and
Asia. The species died out about 40,000 years ago. Homo sapiens arrived
in Europe a few thousand years later.
Scientists have long debated what happened. Some have blamed the change
in climate. Others have proposed explanations including the sudden
spread of diseases and the idea that newcomers competed with the
Neanderthals for resources.
Michael Staubwasser is a scientist with the University of Cologne in
Germany. He and his research team reported their findings in late August
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The researchers
examined existing climate, archaeological and ecological data and added
new measurements of ancient climate. Those measurements came from two
caves in Romania.
Their study centered around two cold and dry periods. One began about
44,000 years ago and lasted about 1,000 years. The other began about
40,800 years ago and lasted about 600 years. The timing of those events
matches the periods in which objects made by Neanderthals disappear.
“Whether they moved or died out, we can’t tell,” Staubwasser told the
Associated Press.
During the two events, signs of Homo sapiens appear in sites within the
Danube River Valley in central and Eastern Europe and in France, the
team noted.
The changes in climate would have turned forests into grassland filled
with small plants. Homo sapiens may have been better adapted to that new
environment than the Neanderthals were. So they may been able to move in
after Neanderthals disappeared, the researchers wrote.
Katerina Harvati is a Neanderthal expert at the University of Tuebingen
in Germany. She was not involved in the study. She said it is helpful to
have the new climate data from southeastern Europe. That is an area that
many researchers think Homo sapiens used to spread through the
continent.
But Harvati said it is unclear whether Neanderthals disappeared and Homo
sapiens appeared at the times the researchers claim. She said that is
because the studies they base their findings on depend on limited
evidence and are sometimes disputed.
Chris Stringer is with the Natural History Museum in London. He said he
thought the paper made a good case for the effect changes in climate had
on Neanderthals. Yet he believes other things also led to their
disappearance.
Rick Potts of the Smithsonian Institution called the study “a refreshing
new look” at how one species took the other’s place.
“As has been said before, our species didn’t outsmart the Neanderthals,”
Potts wrote. “We simply out-survived them.”