Neanderthals’ bigger eyes and bodies meant they had less brain space to dedicate to social networking, which may explain why they died out and Homo sapiens conquered the planet, a study said yesterday.
An enigmatic branch of the human family tree, Neanderthals lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for up to 300,000 years, but vanished from the fossil record about 30,000 to 40,000 years ago.
Why they disappeared is one of the hottest topics in anthropology. Theories say they may have been victims of climate change or were massacred by their Homo sapiens cousins.
Now experts from the University of Oxford and the Natural History Museum in London suggest the answer could lie in available brainpower.
Neanderthals were stockier than anatomically modern humans, who shared the planet with them at the time of their demise, but their brains were the same size, the team wrote in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
As a result, Neanderthals “would have required proportionately more neural matter” to maintain and control their larger bodies, they wrote.
Comparing the skulls of 32 Homo sapiens and 13 Neanderthals, the researchers also established the hominids had bigger eye sockets, indicating bigger eyes and visual cortices — those areas of the brain that regulate vision.
“More of the Neanderthal brain would have been dedicated to vision and body control, leaving less brain to deal with other functions, like social networking,” Oxford anthropologist and lead author Eiluned Pearce said.
Among living primates and humans, the size of an individual’s social network is constrained by the size of specific brain areas, she said.
The larger these areas are, the more connections an individual can maintain.
The archeological record seems to support the theory that Neanderthals were cognitively limited to smaller groups — they transported raw materials over shorter distances and rare finds of symbolic artifacts suggest a limited ability to trade.
The ability to organize a collective response would have been a key to survival when times turned harsh, like during the Ice Age, Pearce said.
“If Neanderthals knew fewer people in fewer neighboring groups, this would have meant fewer sources of help in the event of, for example, local resource failure,” she said. “Smaller groups are also more liable to demographic fluctuations, meaning a greater chance of a particular group dying out. Smaller groups are less able to maintain cultural knowledge, so innovations may be more likely to be lost. Overall, if Neanderthals had smaller groups and social networks, this could have led to their extinction along a variety of pathways.”
Neanderthals probably had larger eyes in the first place because they hailed from higher latitudes and had to deal with lower light than Homo sapiens, who evolved in lower-latitude Africa.
“While the physical response to high latitude conditions adopted by Neanderthals may have been very effective at first, the social response developed by anatomically modern humans seems to have eventually won out in the face of the climate instability that characterized high-latitude Eurasia at this time,” the study concluded.
The relationship between absolute brain size and higher cognitive abilities has long been controversial, the authors admitted.
Their finding, that similar-sized brains had been differently organized, “could explain why Neanderthal culture appears less developed than that of early humans, for example in relation to symbolism, ornamentation and art.”
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