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Highly muscular Homo neanderthalensis was adapted more for hunting than the harsh tundra environment of the Late Pleistocene

31 January 2019

The prevailing explanation for Neanderthal body form is the cold (glacial) adaptation hypothesis.

A Homo neanderthelansis hunt However, palaeoecological associations appear to indicate a less cold woodland environment. Under such conditions, encounter and ambush (rather than pursuit) hunting - and thus muscular power and sprint (rather than endurance) capacity - would have been favoured. We hypothesise that the highly muscular Neanderthal body form reflects an adaptation to hunting conditions rather than cold, and here both review the palaeoecological evidence that they inhabited a mainly woodland environment, and present preliminary genetic analyses in support of this new hypothesis. Among the team members is Professor Mark Thomas (¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Genetics, Evolution & Environment).

Palaeoecological and genetic evidence for Neanderthal power locomotion as an adaptation to a woodland environment

J. R. Stewart, O. García-Rodríguez, M. V. Knul, L. Sewell, H. Montgomery, M. G. Thomas, Y. Diekmann

DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.12.023


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Check out articles discuss this new research:

Irish Examiner (Web), 29/01/2019, Unattributed

The Herald, 30/01/2019, p.8, John Von Radowitz

New Scientist (Web), 29/01/2019, Unattributed

Evening Express (Web), 29/01/2019, Unattributed

BT.com (Web), 29/01/2019, Unattributed