Dragonrock
Militant Elvisian Tacoist
According to wikipedia, neanderthal brains were about 25% larger than average human brains. But, they disappeared about 24,000 years ago. I get the idea that most people view them as less intelligent then their human cousins and that we simply took their land with our superior abilities.
Also, If I recall correctly, humans in the wild have something like a 20% infant mortality rate with a 10% chance that the mother would die during delivery. This was a result of our need for larger heads. A balance was struck between a maximum brain size and a minimum amount of fetal development that would allow the baby a good chance to survive.
Is it possible that the neanderthals were actually our intellectual superiors, but this larger brain led to higher infant and mother mortality rates. Neanderthals lived nicely enough as their greater intelligence gave them superiority over most creatures they competed with. Then, along came humans, someone who filled the exact same niche as neanderthal. Now, competition began and the neanderthals were winning pretty much every contest due to their greater strength and intelligence. However, because of their higher infant mortality every loss on their side had longer term effects. Even though more humans died, we were better able to replace our losses. Eventually, shear numbers crushed the superior (as the average person would think of it) species leaving the inferior (again, as some would perceive) spieces to continue to spread.
As anyone advanced this hypothesis before? Has it already been shot down? If not, how might it be determined short of cloning a neanderthal?
Also, If I recall correctly, humans in the wild have something like a 20% infant mortality rate with a 10% chance that the mother would die during delivery. This was a result of our need for larger heads. A balance was struck between a maximum brain size and a minimum amount of fetal development that would allow the baby a good chance to survive.
Is it possible that the neanderthals were actually our intellectual superiors, but this larger brain led to higher infant and mother mortality rates. Neanderthals lived nicely enough as their greater intelligence gave them superiority over most creatures they competed with. Then, along came humans, someone who filled the exact same niche as neanderthal. Now, competition began and the neanderthals were winning pretty much every contest due to their greater strength and intelligence. However, because of their higher infant mortality every loss on their side had longer term effects. Even though more humans died, we were better able to replace our losses. Eventually, shear numbers crushed the superior (as the average person would think of it) species leaving the inferior (again, as some would perceive) spieces to continue to spread.
As anyone advanced this hypothesis before? Has it already been shot down? If not, how might it be determined short of cloning a neanderthal?