What Your DNA Reveals about the Sex Life of Neanderthals

(nytimes.com)

30 points | by Hooke 3 days ago

6 comments

  • rayiner 1 hour ago
    I can’t believe people are being so flippant describing this story (“sex life”) when there’s a high probability that the differential is because neanderthal males were raping homo sapiens females. Neanderthals had much higher muscle mass and were much stronger than homo sapiens.
    • SoftTalker 42 minutes ago
      We don't know that, and we don't know that neanderthal males were more prone to rape than homo sapiens males. And it's weird to even apply the 21st century concept of rape to prehistoric societies.
      • bloqs 33 minutes ago
        I have to agree, theres a bizarre and worrying internet-brained hysterical element to that original comment which betrays a totally absent education.

        the casual title is because of the scientific and prehistoric nature of the subject

      • TimorousBestie 7 minutes ago
        However, if one happens to be a race science type, there’s a lot of profit that can be made telling suggestive “just so” stories about which homo sapiens genetic lines are allegedly tainted with a larger proportion of neanderthal genes, or however that’s supposed to work.
    • lifestyleguru 4 minutes ago
      > the differential is because neanderthal males were raping homo sapiens females

      They were simply more attractive to homo sapiens females because of more chest hair, muscles, and better defined jawline.

    • TurdF3rguson 23 minutes ago
      > neanderthal males were raping homo sapiens females.

      I guess you'd rather not even be here?

    • rngfnby 1 hour ago
      Well, ya. Of course it was rape. And in retaliation we genocided them, hence the lack of Y and mRNA.
      • jyscao 1 hour ago
        >And in retaliation we genocided them

        This is far from being the only or even main explanation to their extinction.

        The Neanderthal populations were extremely inbred, so I'd guess that was a bigger factor to their decline.

  • Terr_ 2 hours ago
    Before anyone jaunts too far down the road of literal survivorship bias, I'd like to point out that it'd be incredibly premature—or perhaps way too late—to speculate much on the social side of things.

    Elsewhere I've seen some people making hay about exactly whose-males were with whose-females, and want to point out that it's normal for genes to cause asymmetries.

    In particular, consider the modern problem of RH incompatibility [0], where one pairing is more likely to end up with a child than an identical but gender-bent one.

    [0] https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21053-rh-fact...

    • maxrf 2 hours ago
      or even as simple as mitochondria...
  • jyscao 1 hour ago
    Presumably this hypothesis is meant to explain why there is this observed asymmetry in the type of Neanderthal DNA we find in modern human populations that contain them, which is entirely autosomal. With none in the mitochondrial form, which is exclusively passed down along the female line, and also none in the Y-chromosome form, which is exclusively passed down along the male line.

    Without weighing on the validity of their hypothesis that one or both sides found the other“especially attractive”, an alternative mechanism that could explain why we only see Neanderthal autosomal DNA in modern humans could be that only the female offspring of male-Neanderthal and female-sapiens pairings were reproductively fertile. This is more commonly the case in interspecies hybrids, see Haldane’s rule.

    • microgpt 1 hour ago
      why no mitochondrial then?
      • jyscao 1 hour ago
        Because these hybrids would contain mtDNA from their human female line. Neanderthal mtDNA could only be passed down by Neanderthal females.

        And because none of those are found in any modern human populations, we can conclude no humans today are descended from female Neanderthals. Though whether hybridized descendants from male-sapiens female-Neanderthal pairings never existed, or they did exist for some time then eventually went extinct, we cannot currently say with certainty.

        • jjtheblunt 1 hour ago
          > we can conclude no humans today are descended from female Neanderthals.

          that looks worded wrong, strictly speaking. if there's a male neanderthal ancestor, then he very likely has a neanderthal mom or grandma or ... great^N grandma for some N.

          • jyscao 11 minutes ago
            Ok yes, you're right. Guess I meant to say: no humans today are descended from someone between a male sapenis-female Neanderthals hybrid.
  • marojejian 2 days ago
    Boy it so tempting to come up with "just so" stories to explain this. And so frustrating that we will probably never be able to determine the answer. but still cool.
  • nemosaltat 2 hours ago
    In those days, there were γίγαντες and also after.
    • jjtheblunt 1 hour ago
      evidently, i'm not the only one who has watched Ancient Aliens (though with the fam for historical mysteries blended with hilarity)
  • catcowcostume 2 hours ago
    Is there any non-paywalled link for this?
    • jyscao 1 hour ago
      Any browser with reader mode should also work. Worked for me on Brave, both mobile and desktop.
    • garciasn 1 hour ago
      https://archive.is/9mQKV

      For future reference: head on over to archive.is or .ph and you, too, can get around the paywall.

    • Beijinger 36 minutes ago
      I recommend the "Pass paywalls clean" plug-in