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Human origins expert Prof Chris Stringer introduces research on a Museum fossil that helps explain why Neanderthal faces look different to our own. Find out more about the study and what it revealed:
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Human origins expert Prof Chris Stringer introduces research on a Museum fossil that helps explain why Neanderthal faces look different to our own. Find out more about the study and what it revealed:
Customer
Bruh. Do you even science??
Customer
It’d be interesting to know where such nose first appeared in evolution (if the ancient Neanderthals also had it).
Customer
+Andre the Christian Gentleman That mostly clears up my original question, if you are sure that no older forms between Erectus and Neanderthal (whether they are discovered or not) first acquired such nose and it all started with ancient Neanderthal himself.
Customer
+Andre the Christian Gentleman But if you say Homo Erectus had a modern nose already, then surely Neanderthals (which is a species who came chronologically after) couldn’t have inherited it from them.