What does behavior say about a species ability to communicate? Almost everything. We have already established that there is anatomical evidence to suggest that humans and neanderthals had if not the same a very similar vocal repertoire. Whether neanderthals had the mental capacity is a much more difficult question to answer and one that is more heavily debated. We do know however, that middle and upper paleolithic humans and neanderthals had some very similar behavioral characteristics; "they were producing the same Levantine Mousterian tools, using them in similar ways, hunting the same medium-to-large-sized animals, and behaving in other similar ways, such as burying of the dead and building hearths"(Lieberman, Shea 1994). Researchers from many fields of science agree that language and our system of communication was essential to the evolution of humans and it enabled our complex behavior. If the behavior of neanderthals was very similar to that of humans during the time in which they both existed, it inferentially makes sense to believe that neanderthals had some system of communication that would resemble the system used by humans.
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The Neanderthal Museum in Mettman, Germany |
Lieberman, Daniel E., and Shea, John J. “Behavorial Differences Between Archaic and Modem Humans in the Levantine Mousterian.” American Anthropologist. 96(2) (1994): 300-332. Anthrosource. Web. 30 Sep. 2012.