Homo-neanderthalensis-im-Gesprch-mit-sapiens-sapiens Type post Author David Coppedge Date November 18, 2025 Tagged , Alison George, attraction, Chauvet Cave, crayons, Crimea, Darwinian assumptions, Denisovans, Denyse O’Leary, DNA, Durham University, Europeans, finger flutings, genes, handprints, historical racism, Homo sapiens, human genome, human nature, intelligence, introgression, John Hawks, Kristina Killgrove, Krystal Kasal, Michael Gross, modern humans, Neanderthal art, Neanderthals, NOVA1, ochre, ornaments, Paul Pettitt, PIEZO1, PNAS, Racism, Siberia, skulls, speleothems, Taiwan, teeth, Zurich With Neanderthals and Denisovans, We Are All the Same Kind of Being David Coppedge November 18, 2025 7 Evolutionary anthropologists need to stop putting people groups into “less evolved” categories. It’s a form of historical racism. Read More ›
Prehistorical-cave-paintings Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 6, 2025 CategoriesHuman ExceptionalismHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , Ardales, brain, Bruniquel cave, Cantabria, cave art, Durham University, Extremadura, France, handprints, history, installation art, La Pasiega, La Roche Cotard, Loire Valley, Malaga, Maltravieso, materialists, mind, modern humans, Neanderthal art, Neanderthals, Palaeolithic cave art, Paul Pettit, pencil drawings, pigments, Spain, stalactites Could Neanderthals Create Art, or Were They Not Evolved Enough? Denyse O’Leary November 6, 2025 Human Exceptionalism, Human Origins and Anthropology 2 Materialists have long sought to show that Neanderthals were less mentally evolved than modern humans. Read More ›