Why Are We The Only Humans Left?

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2017-04-25に共有
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Part 2 of our special series on Human Ancestry. Watch it all: bit.ly/OKTBSHuman
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In part 2 of our special series on human ancestry, we ask why we are the only surviving branch on the human evolutionary tree. Just 50,000-100,000 years ago, Earth was home to three or four separate human species, including our most famous cousins: the Neanderthals. New research has shown that Neanderthals were not the brutish, unintelligent cavemen that cartoons make them out to be. They were creative, smart, social, and perhaps even had complex language. So why did they go extinct as soon as Homo sapiens moved into their territory? Does any trace of them live on today? Why don’t we have Neanderthal neighbors?

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REFERENCES:

Papagianni, Dimitra, and Michael A. Morse. The Neanderthals Rediscovered: How Modern Science Is Rewriting Their Story. Thames & Hudson, 2015. amzn.to/2oov6GG (Library: www.worldcat.org/oclc/923279213)

Stringer, Chris. “Lone survivors: How we came to be the only humans on earth.” Macmillan, 2012. amzn.to/2oIFg3q (Library: www.worldcat.org/oclc/855581724)

Tattersall, Ian. “Masters of the planet: the search for our human origins.” Macmillan, 2012. amzn.to/2pOZrKS (Library: www.worldcat.org/oclc/733231407)

Walter, Chip. “Last ape standing: the seven-million-year story of how and why we survived.” Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2013. amzn.to/2pP2liy (Library: www.worldcat.org/oclc/872121723)


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コメント (21)
  • @besmart
    It's lonely being the only humans left. Don't you wish we still had some Neanderthal neighbors?
  • @dniam9859
    Neanderthals didn't disappear. I have one living in my house pretending to be my brother.
  • @jp4431
    If we discriminate people of the same species and even put some of them in zoos back in the day, imagine what we would do to our Neanderthal cousins.
  • It would seem cool if multiple human species were living together in this day and age
  • @jaymonaz
    We can't even handle different skin tones now I can imagine if neanderthals were still alive
  • Mankind: theres no way we're the only ones right? Reality: you killed everyone else dummy
  • Kinda makes you wonder if some of the Others in various mythologies, Fomorians in Celtic Myths, Dwarves in Norse Mythology, etc., might be a sort of "cultural memory" of interactions with Neanderthals. A lot can change in a 50,000 year long game of Telephone.
  • @ugo9248
    4:18 we definitely killed them. We find it difficult living together with ourselves, imagine having another competition
  • Being a human (very rare btw), I can confidently say that my species killed all of them
  • @ayoxe348
    Definitely going in my new book called “Humanity’s biggest bruh moments.”
  • @Suzzers
    Crazy to think that so many of us are the result of two very similar species going at it.
  • maybe they became so smart they moved to space and are now laughing at us. (Where tf did you people come from. I- hello🤨 )
  • In all honesty, it’s both fascinating and terrifying to think that we are the last of our ancestors...
  • I'm glad all the other species went extinct. Could you imagine how badly we'd be divided if you threw specieism on top of racism and sexism?
  • This is my first time enjoying your YouTube channel. Great content! Looking forward to hearing more from you! Your video was so informative. Thank you so much!
  • Well the neanderthals made rockets already when we were just learning languages and now they live at the andromeda galaxy
  • Fun fact: we view neandrethals as hunch backed because the first skeleton of a neandrethal we saw had kyphosis
  • During the time the two groups lived together, there was a continuous migration of new modern humans into the shared region. This was due to the population explosion happening at the time in what was a very high quality habitat in the Sahara region. What is known as source sink dynamics is enough to explain why present day humans have a much lower percentage of genes from Neanderthals. It is like mixing 1 part red paint with 99 parts blue paint, both paints are still there, but all you can see is blue. I am not sure of the figures, but I believe that 25% of Neanderthal genes are still in existence in living humans, that 4% figure is just the highest amount that has been found in any one individual.