<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P48"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapX"></SPAN>X<br/> THE NEANDERTHALER AND THE RHODESIAN MAN</h2>
<p>About fifty or sixty thousand years ago, before the climax of the Fourth
Glacial Age, there lived a creature on earth so like a man that until a few
years ago its remains were considered to be altogether human. We have skulls
and bones of it and a great accumulation of the large implements it made and
used. It made fires. It sheltered in caves from the cold. It probably dressed
skins roughly and wore them. It was right-handed as men are.</p>
<p>Yet now the ethnologists tell us these creatures were not
true men. They were of a different species of the same
genus. They had heavy protruding jaws and great brow ridges
above the eyes and very low foreheads. Their thumbs were not
opposable to the fingers as men’s are; their necks were
so poised that they could not turn back their heads and look
up to the sky. They probably slouched along, head down and
forward. Their chinless jaw-bones resemble the Heidelberg
jaw-bone and are markedly unlike human jaw-bones. And there
were great differences from the human pattern in their teeth.
Their cheek teeth were more complicated in structure than
ours, more complicated and not less so; they had not the long
fangs of our cheek teeth; and also these quasi-men had not
the marked canines (dog teeth) of an ordinary human being.
The capacity of their skulls was quite human, but the brain
was bigger behind and lower in front than the human brain.
Their intellectual faculties were differently arranged. They
were not ancestral to the human line. Mentally and physically
they were upon a different line from the human line.</p>
<p>Skulls and bones of this extinct species of man were found at
Neanderthal among other places, and from that place these
strange proto-men have been christened Neanderthal Men, or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P49"></SPAN></span>Neanderthalers. They must have
endured in Europe for many hundreds or even thousands of
years.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-49"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-49.jpg" alt="THE NEANDERTHALER, ACCORDING TO PROF. RUTOT" width-obs="450" height-obs="450" /> <p class="caption">
THE NEANDERTHALER, ACCORDING TO PROF. RUTOT</p>
</div>
<p>At that time the climate and geography of our world was very
different from what they are at the present time. Europe for
example was covered with ice reaching as far south as the
Thames and into Central Germany and Russia; there was no
Channel separating Britain from France; the Mediterranean and
the Red Sea were great valleys, with perhaps a chain of lakes
in their deeper portions, and a great inland sea spread from
the present Black Sea across South Russia and far into
Central Asia. Spain and all of Europe not actually under ice
consisted of bleak uplands under a harder climate than that
of Labrador, and it was only when North Africa was reached
that one would have found a temperate climate. Across the
cold steppes of Southern Europe with its sparse arctic
vegetation, drifted such hardy creatures as the woolly
mammoth, and woolly rhinoceros, great oxen and reindeer, no
doubt following the vegetation northward in spring and
southward in autumn.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P50"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-50"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-50.jpg" alt="Map: Possible Outline of Europe and Western Asia at the Maximum of the Fourth Ice Age (about 50,000 years ago)" width-obs="600" height-obs="434" /> <p class="caption">
</p>
</div>
<p>Such was
the scene through which the Neanderthaler wandered, gathering
such subsistence as he could from small game or fruits and
berries and roots. Possibly he was mainly a vegetarian,
chewing twigs and roots. His level elaborate teeth suggest a
largely vegetarian dietary. But we also find the long marrow
bones of great animals in his caves, cracked to extract the
marrow. His weapons could not have been of much avail in
open conflict with great beasts, but it is supposed that he
attacked them with spears at difficult river crossings and
even constructed pitfalls for them. Possibly he followed the
herds and preyed upon any dead that were killed in fights,
and perhaps he played the part of jackal to the sabre-toothed
tiger which still survived in his day. Possibly in the
bitter hardships of the Glacial Ages this creature had taken
to attacking animals after long ages of vegetarian
adaptation.</p>
<p>We cannot guess what this Neanderthal man looked like. He may
have been very hairy and very unhuman-looking indeed. It is
even doubtful if he went erect. He may have used his
knuckles as well as his feet to hold himself up. Probably he
went about <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P51"></SPAN></span>alone or in small family groups. It
is inferred from the structure of his jaw that he was
incapable of speech as we understand it.</p>
<p>For thousands of years these Neanderthalers were the highest
animals that the European area had ever seen; and then some
thirty or thirty-five thousand years ago as the climate grew
warmer a race of kindred beings, more intelligent, knowing
more, talking and co-operating together, came drifting into
the Neanderthaler’s world from the south. They ousted
the Neanderthalers from their caves and squatting places;
they hunted the same food; they probably made war upon their
grisly predecessors and killed them off. These newcomers
from the south or the east—for at present we do not
know their region of origin—who at last drove the
Neanderthalers out of existence altogether, were beings of
our own blood and kin, the first True Men. Their brain-cases
and thumbs and necks and teeth were anatomically the same as
our own. In a cave at Cro-Magnon and in another at Grimaldi,
a number of skeletons have been found, the earliest truly
human remains that are so far known.</p>
<p>So it is our race comes into the Record of the Rocks, and the
story of mankind begins.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-51"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-51.jpg" alt="COMPARISON OF (1) MODERN SKULL AND (2) RHODESIAN SKULL" width-obs="600" height-obs="287" /> <p class="caption">
COMPARISON OF (1) MODERN SKULL AND (2) RHODESIAN SKULL
<br/>
<small><i>Nat. Hist. Mus.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>The world was growing liker our own in those days though the
climate was still austere. The glaciers of the Ice Age were
receding in Europe; the reindeer of France and Spain
presently gave way to great herds of horses as grass
increased upon the steppes, and the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P52"></SPAN></span>mammoth became more and more rare in
southern Europe and finally receded northward altogether ....</p>
<p>We do not know where the True Men first originated. But in
the summer of 1921, an extremely interesting skull was found
together with pieces of a skeleton at Broken Hill in South
Africa, which seems to be a relic of a third sort of man,
intermediate in its characteristics between the Neanderthaler
and the human being. The brain-case indicates a brain bigger
in front and smaller behind than the Neanderthaler’s,
and the skull was poised erect upon the backbone in a quite
human way. The teeth also and the bones are quite human.
But the face must have been ape-like with enormous brow
ridges and a ridge along the middle of the skull. The
creature was indeed a true man, so to speak, with an ape-
like, Neanderthaler face. This Rhodesian Man is evidently
still closer to real men than the Neanderthal Man.</p>
<p>This Rhodesian skull is probably only the second of what in
the end may prove to be a long list of finds of sub-human
species which lived on the earth in the vast interval of time
between the beginnings of the Ice Age and the appearance of
their common heir, and perhaps their common exterminator, the
True Man. The Rhodesian skull itself may not be very
ancient. Up to the time of publishing this book there has
been no exact determination of its probable age. It may be
that this sub-human creature survived in South Africa until
quite recent times.</p>
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