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The Iberian Peninsula, better known as present-day Spain and Portugal, was one of the last Neanderthal refuges. Many scientists have thought that out-hunting by Homo sapiens and interbreeding with them brought Neanderthals to their demise, but climate change has also been proposed.
To figure out the temperature, water supply, and windiness of Iberia from 20,000 to 40,000 years ago, the scientists looked at sediments on the ocean floor off Spain and Portugal. Because wind or water erode rocky minerals differently, the pebbles and fragments wash into the sea in different ratios, creating a steady track record of land conditions at the bottom of the ocean.
The study reveals three rough climatic periods for Neanderthals, with the last and harshest period starting about 26,000 years ago. “The last event was very, very cold and dry,” Jiménez-Espejo says, “and other than 250,000 years ago, such a harsh climate was never reached before.”
SOURCE:
LiveScience.com
Originally posted by iori_komei
I think what will end up being found out, is that Neanderthals faded out
of existence through a mixture of climate change effects, less prey and
interbreeding with humans.
Originally posted by KilgoreTrout
addditonally bottle-necks of neaderthal populations caused by isolation (environmental or via homosapien expansion) resulted in interbreeding and the proliferation of abnormalities. In the end they died out because they weren't the fittest and the homosapiens were.