Were Neanderthals responsible for their own extinction?
Authored by Xavier Rubio-Campillo, Jordi Agusti
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2016.02.017
Sponsors:
SimulPast Project – Consolider Ingenio 2010
Platforms:
Pandora
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
After more than 100,000 years of evolutionary success in Western
Eurasia, Neanderthals rapidly went extinct between 40,000 and 30,000
years ago, almost coinciding with the spread of Anatomically Modern Homo
sapiens (AMHS) in Europe. Several scenarios relate their extinction to
competition with AMHS, climatic changes during the last glacial period
or a combination of both. Here we propose a much simpler scenario, in
which the cannibalistic behaviour of Neanderthals may have played a
major role in their eventual extinction. We show that this trait was
selected as a common behaviour at moments of environmental or population
stress. However, as soon as Neanderthals had to compete with another
species that consumed the same resources (AMHS in this case) cannibalism
had a negative impact, leading, in the end, to their extinction. To test
this hypothesis, we used an agent-based model computer simulation. The
model is simple, with only traits, behaviours and landscape features
defined and with no attempt to re-create the exact landscape in which
Neanderthals lived or their cultural characteristics. The basic agent of
our system is a group of individuals that form a community. The most
important state variable of our model is the location of the group,
coupled with a defined home range and two additional factors:
cannibalism and the chance of fission. The result of the simulation
shows that cannibalistic behaviour is always selected when resources are
scarce and clustered. However, when a non-cannibalistic species (late
Pleistocene AMHS) is introduced into the same environment, the
cannibalistic species retreats and the new species grows until it has
reached the carrying capacity of the system. The cannibalistic
populations that still survive are displaced from the richest areas, and
live on the borders with arid zones, a situation which is remarkably
similar to what we know about the end of the Neanderthals. (C) 2016
Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
Tags
modelling
Cannibalism
Extinction
Pleistocene
Spain
Neanderthals
Early pleistocene
Eurasia