Neanderthal
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We have lyrics for 'Neanderthal' by these artists:


ADR the window is closing but its open right now the breeze on…
Centvrion I'm the invisible thing that you need the reflection of you…
Demolition Hammer Progressive evolution Spawns a hybrid breed Through natura…
Doorly Once upon a time, back in the day There were cavemen…
Doorly feat. Marshall Jefferson Once upon a time, back in the day There were cavemen…
Embludgeonment When others are adjusting, they are just lost, command is…
Los Gardelitos Hombre de Neanderthal eres un astronauta igual hombre de N…
Os Fuzzíveis Ele não era um cara normal Queria viver como um Neanderthal…
Sunspot Virtual murder, pixelated death, we can kill each other, …

We have lyrics for these tracks by The Link:


Dancing in the Dark We’ve, gotta, get ourselves outta here, We’re in a place bui…
Her Yea, and anotha one Big Pun baby, Big Pun baby Tony Sunshine…
Lies It’s been a long night Alcohol got me feeling light But ther…
Outside Uh can't help it yeah I love me a thug Get…



Underground And you can't see yourself in the mirror anymore And you're…


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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

Mountain Nomad VFX

No.

Don't conflating breed and species.

What dog breeds differences represent vs the canus lupus species is roughly equivalent to the ethnic differences between homo sapiens.

ie phenotypically distinct in many features (height/weight/coloring) but with minimal genotypical differences.

Neanderthals and Denisovans are still very genetically distinct species from Homo Sapiens to the point that their lineage can still be seen thousands of generations later in our DNA after they have gone entirely extinct.

A better comparison would be with animals like lions and tigers that can breed together - both species are very genetically distinct yet can breed.

BUT..... (and this is a very important but)

It is entirely possible, if not likely that many such couplings produced offspring that could not themselves produce offspring of their own.

Likely many of these Sapien/Neanderthalis or Sapien/Denisova couplings produced infertile children, but only a few were required to spread a little extra Neanderthal or Denisovan DNA into the larger Homo Sapien population.



Mountain Nomad VFX

"We "humans" could've had a civilization as large as ours today"

There is a huuuuuuuge fallacy in that statement.

We do not have one singular civilisation today.

We have many.

Don't confuse globalisation and the reach of technology for the singular merging of civilisation, because that is not what we have.

Even if this age of technological advancement continues for centuries it will still take a serious cultural upheaval before we would be classed as a singular civilisation.

It would have been even worse 10k years ago.

As to "absolutely no way for us to know", well all I can say is this only demonstrates a woeful degree of knowledge about modern material science.

Don't confuse the prevalence of cheaply made/sourced building materials for the state of all material science.

There are materials we have produced that have to hold up to insanely destructive industrial manufacturing/production processes - every time a part in these factories has to be replaced this causes a slowdown and loss of profit, so there is a capitalistic impetus to drive material science to levels that make mere stone a joke to our level of achievement.

We can literally synthesize compounds harder than diamond already.

Harder. Than. Diamond.

Let that sink in and think about it the next time some brainless blond airhead on Youtube says there will be nothing left of us in 10k years just because these pseudo archaeologists couldn't be arsed to actually research the science.



Mountain Nomad VFX

@onewayOG We are looking plenty at Doggerland.

Unfortunately as it is in the middle of the North Sea the underwater current is often counter productive to marine archaeology.

It's certainly nothing like as easy as excavating the ruins of Heracleion off the shores of lower Egypt.

Unless they do something insanely expensive like cordoning off an area with a giant sea wall it's going to have to be infrequent diving, light dredging, and possibly some underwater robotic drone work.

All of which is considerably more expensive than excavations on land.



xALLSTATEx

Jahannah cracks me up, sometimes...!!
Between some of the crazy faces she makes and the way her sheer excitement shines through in her speaking while discussing the topics of her videos, causing her mouth to suddenly malfunction in what I would jokingly describe as "seemingly random, momentary bouts of an excitement-induced speech impediment (all of which I find adorable and interesting, btw -- bc she has so much personality, and because the topics that she discusses in her videos are genuinely exciting, in the first place)," I really enjoy her videos...!!
It doesn't hurt that I (much like the vast majority of Americans, I would imagine) find most of the various English accents to be hopelessly irresistible, to begin with... 😊
Hilarious personal fun fact:
Several years ago I exchanged the original factory default voice on my phone for one that is both female and British (possessing what I would describe as a "super-sexy, authoritative and very proper English accent"), because I find that it makes for a much more pleasant and calming listening experience... 😊
.....and also because it somehow feels like she (I call her "Mary Poppins" lol) is a much better-informed alternative to the generic voice; and, therefore is much more qualified to be fielding my various oddball queries or giving me driving directions, throughout my day...!!! x'D
#True story

PS: For a perfect example of the "excitement-induced speech impediment" thing that I previously mentioned, listen to the first ten seconds of this video a few times in a row... 😆
You're so cute, Jahannah, and we love you so much for all that you are and for all that you do....!! Please don't ever stop being you...!!



Mountain Nomad VFX

It was never that much closer.

You clearly haven't appreciated the distances involved, which are still considerable even with a significant drop to the level of the Minoan settlement found recently close to the shore of Crete.

"and there was also a time long, long ago, when the Mediterranean basin wasn't filled with seawater."

Incorrect.

There are huge salt deposits on the sea bed which imply it did dry out at some point in places, but not completely, and so far back that it doesn'r matter anyways.

Besides which the HUGE deposits would render the earth utterly useless to grow anything on - it's probably only the sheer size, modern depth and connection to the Atlantic Ocean of the Mediterranean that stops it from becoming like the Dead Sea in Israel.

If the Strait of Gibraltar was blocked somehow then the marine life in the Mediterranean would probably be poisoned from the salt content within centuries, if not decades.



All comments from YouTube:

Yves

Very interesting, we always looked down on Neanderthal, it's even an insult. I think that they also had the gene for invention, because when you look at their itinerary from western Europe to east Asia, it follows the evolution of technology. I heard a program on the radio about a skeleton of an adult Neanderthal that had major physical impairment, an arm and a leg didn't develop properly, making it impossible for him to hunt and probably to walk, but he died as an adult and was buried with the others, so it means that the community took care of him and provided food for him, not bad for a grunting caveman... I don't understand why they are represented walking as a crackhead.

Barkasz

Two reasons:
1. Neanderthals were first identified in the late 1800’s, and expanded upon in the early 1900’s. That was the time period of peak scientific racism and general arrogance.
2. One of the first full Neanderthal skeletons that were found suffered from severe rheumatism and possibly some other stuff as well, which made the skeleton look hunched over and incapable of fine toolmaking.
So those two facts combined created this impression that they were primitive brutes.

Yves

@Mountain Nomad VFX Evolution didn't happen at the same rate on every continent, without colonization/invasion, on some continents like Africa, Australia, north America people would still make fire by rubbing wood sticks and hunt with spears. So what I meant was that there was variations in human mix that didn't produce the same result, and I think that Neanderthal could be a factor.

dannyboywhaa

@Yves I think it’s more environment to be honest... you need navigable rivers and certain mineral deposits or other bountiful conditions... for example, the south and East Asians score higher on IQ tests and had favourable environments yet the mastery of ocean travel and gunpowder were enough to see Europeans dominate for the best part of a thousand years now... its environment mostly!

William Jordan

Homo Sapiens were quite inventive before encountering Neanderthals.

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Thomas Ratliff

Hello Jahannah, I'm just some old dude from Texas who also finds history, ancient history interesting. This video was posted over a year ago however, I have recently found you. I do respect the research you put into your subjects. I also respect how you include links so as not to clame to know all!! Totally cool!! I was/am a big fan of Ben, UnchartedX, and I have seen you guys team up a time or two. Okay, I just wanted to share my respect for what you do!! Thank you :)

Uncle CornPop

it certainly makes a lot of sense.
before i was diagnosed with autism, i always felt alien to everybody else. while they were concerned with maintaining their social lives, i always felt a need to learn and understand the world better.
I always feel a strong connection with animals, which has stayed with me since childhood, but also with a natural kind of skepticism of the intent of other people. Because people are so good at lying and masking their intentions, i always feel apprehensive when interacting with people I'm not familiar with. I've always preferred having a smaller group of like-minded people as friends, than having to play a constant social balancing act for people who often only care on a surface level.

Build&Play

On the cave stone arrangement: Look at it this way...if you are settling on a spot to set up camp, for a night or a few days, you find a relatively flat area and you push all the debris (rocks, sticks, etc) out of the way, off to the side. Any camp site would look similar to this when you leave it. Also piling up rocks in one spot is something humans have done for thousands of years, because you might need a good stone for some purpose on another occasion -- piling them gives you a broad selection, when needed. At the edge of farms, even today, you will find rocks piled.

w13rdguy

It's a chicken coup. It's a hot tub. It's....a baby crib. It's....

Benjamin Steele

There was a group of chimpanzees that were observed over a long period carrying rocks to a specific place and piling them. It seemed to have become some kind of ritual-like behavior.

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