NEANDERTALS WEREN’T CAVEMEN
In this era of planned misinformation, it becomes even more important to understand the true history of mankind. One of the myths promulgated is that Neandertals were subhuman. Lita Sanders of Creation Ministries International recently re-published her article about these early humans. It is believed that many suffered from rickets, a disease causing malformation of bones, giving some a strange appearance. This was caused by lack of nutrition in the only food available soon after Noah’s flood.
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Gibber! Gibber!
Chugley
NEANDERTALS WEREN’T CAVEMEN
Lita Sanders
June 2022
When Neandertals are depicted in museums and media, they are often portrayed as ‘cavemen’. This is because their best-known artifacts are associated with caves.
Neandertal caves are rich with evidence that they were intelligent, cultured people. Thus, while at least some Neandertals lived in caves at least some of the time, it shouldn’t surprise us to learn that caves were not the only places Neandertals lived. But it was only in the 1980s that anthropologist Margaret Conkey was the first to consider: what traces did Neandertals leave outside their caves? While at least some Neandertals lived in caves at least some of the time, it shouldn’t surprise us to learn that caves were not the only places Neandertals lived.
In 2011 the frame of a dwelling constructed of mammoth bones was discovered in a Ukrainian site rich in Neandertal-type cultural remains.1 And in 2013, Conkey and colleagues found a likely Neandertal open-air habitation site in Peyre Blanque, France.2 Artifacts included hundreds of stone tools, and stone slabs which may have been the base for some form of dwelling!
In 2017, Neandertal remains were found along with cultural artifacts of habitation at another open-air site in northern Israel.3
These discoveries give us further insight into Neandertal life. Neandertal caves have the remains of animals that were mostly available in autumn or winter, indicating they were mainly inhabited during the colder months. During the warmer part of the year, the occupants seem to have moved to seasonal camps in locations apparently maintained over generations.
Why would anyone be surprised that Neandertals acted much like other nomadic people? Why did it take so long to look for evidence of Neandertals outside their caves? At least partially because of the evolutionary idea that Neandertals were subhuman, and thus presumed to be incapable of building their own structures. And this was reinforced by the enormous evolutionary dates assigned to them, effectively classifying them as sub-human.A biblical framework sees Neandertals as post-Babel people who were among the first to emigrate into Europe.
By contrast, a biblical framework sees Neandertals as human. So, it makes sense that they display all of the abilities we would expect of our distant relatives.
References and notes
- Yirka, B., Neanderthal home made of mammoth bones discovered in Ukraine; phys.org, 19 Dec 2011. Return to text.
- Isabella, J., The caveman’s home was not a cave, Nautilus; nautil.us, 5 Dec 2013. Return to text.
- Been, E. et al., The first Neanderthal remains from an open-air Middle Palaeolithic site in the Levant, Scientific Reports 7(2958), 7 Jun 2017. Return to
Lita Sanders (née Cosner)
Biography
Lita became a Christian in 2002, partially as a result of creation materials she found through CMI which answered her questions about the Bible and Christianity (see her own account).
Lita is a specialist in New Testament studies and obtained a B.A. (summa cum laude) in Biblical Studies from Oklahoma Wesleyan University in 2008. She received an M.A. (cum laude) in New Testament from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in 2012. Her thesis is titled Jesus the Honorable Broker: A Social-Scientific Exegesis of Matthew 15:21–28.
Her passion is interpreting the New Testament in a way that is understandable to the average Christian, as well as showing how the New Testament authors used the teachings of the Old Testament as the foundation for their theology, particularly in the area of Creation. She is the co-author of the booklets How Did We Get Our Bible? and Gay Marriage: Right or Wrong?. Her talk, Creation in the New Testament and Why it Matters, is available as a video download.