>>4345378The question I pose is this:
Most humans, at most, only share 2.56% of their DNA with that of Neanderthals
Theories circulate that it was possibly disease from Africans coming to Europe which killed them (which who's to say it shouldn't have been the other way around). You all say that it's because they were outbred, but why isn't it that Neanderthal traits dominated? Especially considering their cranium size in comparison with modern humans
You could even ask why a species like the Boskop people didn't survive, boasting almost alien-like characteristics
>In April 2008, neuroscientists Gary Lynch and Richard Granger published a book on human intelligence titled Big Brain: The Origins and Future of Human Intelligence, in which Boskop fossils play a prominent role. The authors conclude that the head of a Boskop would have been some 30 percent larger than that of modern humans, giving them a large forebrain, which in turn may indicate a relatively high intelligence quotient (IQ).