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Post by UKarchaeology on Jan 29, 2016 20:13:38 GMT
Neanderthals could have lived as far north as Southern Scandinavia, according to a new study.The location of the northern boundary of Neanderthal dispersal has long been a source of controversy among archaeologists and historians. Skeptics argue that Neanderthals couldn’t have inhabited what is today Denmark for the simple reason that the climate there was too cold. Published in the journal Quarternary International, the new study questions this idea. Although not proving either way whether Neanderthals actually made it as far as Southern Scandinavia, it shows that climate constraints wouldn’t have been enough to stop them. Two main hypotheses exist regarding Neanderthal inhabitation of Southern Scandinavia. The first, and by far the most widely held, is that climate constraints and dispersal barriers made it an impossibility. The second hypothesis claims that they did migrate north of 55°N, but they have for some reason remained invisible to the archaeological record. Full story: www.newhistorian.com/neanderthals-could-have-lived-in-southern-scandinavia/5840/
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