Nobody Cares about Pre-History

Beebo Brink

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350,000 years earlier than believed. That is quite a leap backwards.
That date makes a lot more sense to me than the 50,000 years ago that had previously been proposed. Modern humans didn't acquire fire because of increased brain capacity. Instead, we became modern humans because we had fire.

Controlling fire led to cooking, and it was cooking our food which enabled our brain growth. Brains are expensive organs to fuel with calories. Cooking reduced the energy required to chew and digest food. That excess energy could then be spared for increased brain activity.
 

Innula Zenovka

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Beebo Brink

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This makes me wonder about the extent to which earlier theories about Neanderthals going extinct because of competition with Homo Sapiens were the result of the then evidence, such as it was, being interpreted through the ideological prism of "race science," such as The Passing of the Great Race..
I don't see those two theories to be incompatible, along with theories about changing weather patterns and humans working with dogs. There is far less likely to be one single factor than there is death by thousand cuts. As Neanderthal population numbers dropped (for any number of reasons), the pressure to integrate with, rather than separate from, modern human groups would have intensified.
 
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The earliest medications.

Neanderthals may have used birch tar as more than just glue; it could have helped them ward off infection and even insect bites.

People from several modern Indigenous cultures, including the Mi’kmaq of eastern Canada, use tar from birch bark to treat skin infections and keep wounds from festering. We know from several archaeological sites that Neanderthals also knew how to extract birch tar and that they used it as an adhesive to haft weapons. A recent study tested distilled birch tar against the bacteria S. aureleus and E. coli and found that Neanderthals could easily have used the same material as medicine for their frequent injuries.
 

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Rolling dice is a very old activity on both sides of the World

Native Americans have been playing with dice in games of chance for more than 12,000 years, according to a new paper published in the journal American Antiquity. And the oldest examples of Native American dice predate the earliest currently known dice in the Old World by millennia.

“Historians have traditionally treated dice and probability as Old World innovations,” said author Robert Madden, a graduate student at Colorado State University. “What the archaeological record shows is that ancient Native American groups were deliberately making objects designed to produce random outcomes, and using those outcomes in structured games, thousands of years earlier than previously recognized.”