Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

rysworld t1_ir7q7ds wrote

There is genetic evidence extant in the genomes of large populations of humans and in DNA we have been able to extract from Neanderthal remains:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4072735/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2860157/

It is also notable that while there was SOME genetic input from Neanderthals into the modern human genome, there are no Neanderthal genes on any modern human Y chromosome- suggesting that it was either impossible for male Neanderthals and female modern humans to breed at all or that any such offspring produced were sterile like mules- a genetic block to fully interbreeding that points to a genetic basis to call them a different species.

We also have a lot of examples of modern human remains that have spent time in a wide variety of conditions, and none of them seem to deform in ways that give them the morphological characteristics of Neanderthals.

1

cent178 OP t1_ir8gz74 wrote

Have we ever found human remains in similar conditions that Neanderthal remains have been found in? Like in a cave decomposing? Have Neanderthal remains always been found in caves? If there have been found human remains decomposing in a cave and the remains did not look like a Neanderthal I think that kind of answers my question since then two different things have been found.

1