Excellent! Love this channel. Your videos are so full of profound information, they're very professionally produced, edited and captivating. The narration is top-notch too. In other words, GREAT JOB!
Thank you for exploring Neanderthal family ties. I truly believe that their desire, ability, and implementation of caring for one another - despite having no observable benefit - is what truly makes us “human”. Now, off to learn more about heteroplasty. How very interesting!
Very good video. Just one little pronunciation correction: it is De-NI-so-va and De-NI-so-van, not De-ni-SO-va or De-ni-SO-van. Lots of creators seem to get this wrong, but getting it right just adds more credibility to the narration.
As we learn to accept and respect our rich rainbow of race, gender, and ethnicity, we must also learn to welcome different human species (or subspecies) into our rainbow.
Personally, I see Neanderthals were in many aspects absolut on par with modern humans. And a side note to many used images: I esteem the clothing in the AI images to be more acurate than the simple "groin furrs" or the repeatedly used sloppy "coss playing actors".
This adds another layer of complexity to Neanderthals and the origins of the family which lie back before the origins of homo sapiens sapiens. The more we learn about Neanderthals the more "human" they become. This one of many reasons I refer to them as homo sapiens neanderthalensis. I am proud to carry their DNA and that of my distant Denisovan ancestors. This is why I refer to myself as a Neandersovan-Sapiens hybrid.
@@evoinception My recent ancestry is from the British isle, but was surprised to find that I also carry a more remote heritage of Finnish, North, Central, and South African (non Dutch Afrikaans). Roma, Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish, North Indian and Dravidan Mongolian, Austronesian, Mongolian and Central/South Amerind DNA and last but not least a tiny touch of Altai and Burmese. It really is quite a mixture.
I wonder if someday they might find genetic indicators for high levels of tool use, ability to think spatially. I remember discussing the layout of the rooms of a house with my father while standing on a completely featureless plywood deck of the first floor. He thought the arrangement of the rooms should be different. I could see what he was talking about. In many many situations I'm the one who figures it out, fixes it. I don't understand why so many people seem so unable at these things, and so uninterested. It makes sense to me that there might be a genetic connection. When I first learned of the possibility of Neanderthal genetic heritage in homo sapiens (University of Michigan study around 1990, based on skulls, later disproved) I have a large skull, seemed obvious. Okay, I'm part Neanderthal... (I didn't buy that stupid cave man stuff.) My nephew's DNA test indicated less than 2% Neanderthal, pretty standard, so it seems we're all about the same percentage... Hiking in the mountains of southern California I wondered what it would be like trying to survive there. I know I can find water, but that's about it. I think even Bear Grills would have a difficult time finding food. A Neanderthal kid would probably have little difficulty.
Here we go again, why is the narrator talking about Neanderthals, while showing depictions of modern humans. We KNOW how Neanderthal skulls were shaped, and yet they insist on showing them with pronounced high foreheads, (instead of the actual low Neanderthal forehead). Why? Are the people at 'Evo Inception' implying there is anything wrong with depicting as they really were? If so, WHY? I'm sure the people in the graphics department are capable of making accurate likenesses of Neanderthals, so why don't they? After all, Neanderthals were what they were, so why not show them as they actually were and stop this foolishness?
Did you go back and take a photo? So how would you know exactly what they looked like? And you know that you probably have 3-5% Neanderthal DNA inside you - do you show any signs on the outside?
Neanderthals didn't have high cheekbones like Cromagnon man witch in fact you represent in the photo except that they were dark in skin and hair often with blue eyes!!! On the contrary, they had a long face, socalled dolichocephalic like we see in many modern Westerners and also in semites... A neanderthal heritage, perhaps?
@@magsrankin6166; I have only seen a few documentaries on Neanderthals that have made any attempt to show their appearance anywhere near accurately, and I am beginning to wounder why? Is there some agenda I'm unaware of?
Excellent! Love this channel. Your videos are so full of profound information, they're very professionally produced, edited and captivating. The narration is top-notch too. In other words, GREAT JOB!
thanks for your kind words ...
Thank you for exploring Neanderthal family ties. I truly believe that their desire, ability, and implementation of caring for one another - despite having no observable benefit - is what truly makes us “human”.
Now, off to learn more about heteroplasty. How very interesting!
thanks for your continued support and interest in topic ...
Very good video. Just one little pronunciation correction: it is De-NI-so-va and De-NI-so-van, not De-ni-SO-va or De-ni-SO-van. Lots of creators seem to get this wrong, but getting it right just adds more credibility to the narration.
As we learn to accept and respect our rich rainbow of race, gender, and ethnicity, we must also learn to welcome different human species (or subspecies) into our rainbow.
Gender?
😂😂😂😂
Excellent! Thank you for this informative video.
thanks for your kind words..
How do we know that the Neanderthals became extinct rather than interbreeding into what we are today…maybe a bit of both.
Interbreeding definitely happened.
Personally, I see Neanderthals were in many aspects absolut on par with modern humans.
And a side note to many used images: I esteem the clothing in the AI images to be more acurate
than the simple "groin furrs" or the repeatedly used sloppy "coss playing actors".
"Withered arm and a deformed skull" Creb has entered the building
This adds another layer of complexity to Neanderthals and the origins of the family which lie back before the origins of homo sapiens sapiens. The more we learn about Neanderthals the more "human" they become. This one of many reasons I refer to them as homo sapiens neanderthalensis. I am proud to carry their DNA and that of my distant Denisovan ancestors. This is why I refer to myself as a Neandersovan-Sapiens hybrid.
you carry wonderful heritage ...
@@evoinception My recent ancestry is from the British isle, but was surprised to find that I also carry a more remote heritage of Finnish, North, Central, and South African (non Dutch Afrikaans). Roma, Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish, North Indian and Dravidan Mongolian, Austronesian, Mongolian and Central/South Amerind DNA and last but not least a tiny touch of Altai and Burmese. It really is quite a mixture.
Beautiful video. Nice pictures and very informative!
thanks for your kind words ...
I wonder if someday they might find genetic indicators for high levels of tool use, ability to think spatially. I remember discussing the layout of the rooms of a house with my father while standing on a completely featureless plywood deck of the first floor. He thought the arrangement of the rooms should be different. I could see what he was talking about. In many many situations I'm the one who figures it out, fixes it. I don't understand why so many people seem so unable at these things, and so uninterested. It makes sense to me that there might be a genetic connection. When I first learned of the possibility of Neanderthal genetic heritage in homo sapiens (University of Michigan study around 1990, based on skulls, later disproved) I have a large skull, seemed obvious. Okay, I'm part Neanderthal... (I didn't buy that stupid cave man stuff.) My nephew's DNA test indicated less than 2% Neanderthal, pretty standard, so it seems we're all about the same percentage...
Hiking in the mountains of southern California I wondered what it would be like trying to survive there. I know I can find water, but that's about it. I think even Bear Grills would have a difficult time finding food. A Neanderthal kid would probably have little difficulty.
you make a very interesting point here, with more research and evidence, neanderthals might end up being more advanced in many cases...
Here we go again, why is the narrator talking about Neanderthals, while showing depictions of modern humans. We KNOW how Neanderthal skulls were shaped, and yet they insist on showing them with pronounced high foreheads, (instead of the actual low Neanderthal forehead). Why? Are the people at 'Evo Inception' implying there is anything wrong with depicting as they really were? If so, WHY? I'm sure the people in the graphics department are capable of making accurate likenesses of Neanderthals, so why don't they? After all, Neanderthals were what they were, so why not show them as they actually were and stop this foolishness?
Our past is just a propaganda tool, unfortunately! But, you have the eye...
@@belagyanta7 propaganda by who, for what reason?
The truth about Neanderthals will surprise you my friend! I’m not telling the secrets I know but, the Vatican has it all archived!
Did you go back and take a photo?
So how would you know exactly what they looked like?
And you know that you probably have 3-5% Neanderthal DNA inside you - do you show any signs on the outside?
1. Neanderthal people had blue eyes.
And red hair (in general)
Neanderthals didn't have high cheekbones like Cromagnon man witch in fact you represent in the photo except that they were dark in skin and hair often with blue eyes!!!
On the contrary, they had a long face, socalled dolichocephalic like we see in many modern Westerners and also in semites... A neanderthal heritage, perhaps?
"How much for the little girl?"
54,000 years ago... that's not biblical.
Seriously?
Please show me the chapter and verse…
There were humans around
They mutated
fascinating!
thank you ...
By the way, thumbs down.
Thanks. Will leave it there, then, if inaccurate in this important aspect. Raises questions as to the credibility of ALL their content.
@@magsrankin6166; I have only seen a few documentaries on Neanderthals that have made any attempt to show their appearance anywhere near accurately, and I am beginning to wounder why? Is there some agenda I'm unaware of?