Why not the Neandertals?

被引:26
作者
Wolpoff, MH [1 ]
Mannheim, B
Mann, A
Hawks, J
Caspari, R
Rosenberg, KR
Frayer, DW
Gill, GW
Clark, G
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Dept Anthropol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Princeton Univ, Dept Anthropol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
[3] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Anthropol, Madison, WI 53706 USA
[4] Univ Delaware, Dept Anthropol, Newark, DE 19716 USA
[5] Univ Kansas, Dept Anthropol, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA
[6] Univ Wyoming, Dept Anthropol, Laramie, WY 82071 USA
[7] Arizona State Univ, Dept Anthropol, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
modern human origins; Neandertals; language; cognitive evolution;
D O I
10.1080/0043824042000303700
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
Some workers have suggested that a hypothetical genetic mutation in an African population less than 100,000 years ago led to a cascade of neurological changes in the human brain that culminated in the appearance of modern language. Language then triggered the socioeconomic and cognitive changes we associate with behavioral modernity and Africans, armed with behavioral modernity, then spread out from that continent, out-competing, displacing, extirpating, outbreeding or, most generally, replacing the Neandertals and other archaic humans throughout the middle latitudes of the Old World. The Neandertals of Europe are the best-known, best-represented and longest studied test case for this theory. In this paper we present evidence from skeletal anatomy, mitochondrial DNA, morphology and genetics of speech and the archaeology of the Middle-Upper Paleolithic transition in Europe that directly contradicts all of the elements in this replacement scenario. The processes leading to modernity involved the entire human species, and were based on the ethnogenic principle of communication and reticulation among populations.
引用
收藏
页码:527 / 546
页数:20
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