We all have our kinks.
Submitted 2 weeks ago by misk@piefed.social to anthropology@mander.xyz
Comments
sik0fewl@piefed.ca 2 weeks ago
bran_buckler@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
Isn’t there an inherent bias in that if the children stayed with the mothers, and since modern humans ended up surviving, while Neanderthals ultimately died out, that the surviving progeny that became our ancestors would have been the mix of modern human women with Neanderthal men. But, I guess this makes the assumption that women stayed with their group and didn’t leave, or get captured by other groups.
ruuster13@lemmy.zip 2 weeks ago
Some things never change.
givesomefucks@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
The simple explanation is that one of the main advantages humans had, was how fast we could pump out babies…
Even if cross species pairing happened at an equal rate, the neanderthal males and human females would reproduce at a rate as high as human/human.
But neanderthal females and human males would reproduce as slowly as neanderthal/neanderthal couples.
Because neanderthal genes on a Y chromosome didn’t have negative select rated of lowered birth rate, that’s obviously where they’d hide out the longest.
Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe 2 weeks ago
Is that something well established? (I genuinely know nothing about it, but find it really interesting).
If so, then this article comes off rather amateurish (you were kinder, lol).
givesomefucks@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
We’re talking about neanderthals who went extinct like 40k years ago…
Nothing is really “well established”.
But yeah, them having a lower reproductive rate has been pretty widely accepted for a while. They were as smart as us and waaaay stronger and with better immune system.
About the only thing modern humans have going for us is we’re basically the sapian equivalent of cancer. Neanderthals barely reproduced enough to keep their own numbers up, so when humans showed up and added a bunch of new mouths, it was just a numbers game.
It’s never going to be just one thing tho. Another big theory is the neanderthal Y chromosome triggered an immune response in human females which resulted in male hybrids not being carried to term, while female hybrids could be.
I just glanced over this article, but it ignores a lot of prior research and most importantly:
Who knows who was choosing who back then or why. The best we can tell is whose babies went on to have more babies, and sometimes with who.