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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,266 --> 00:00:03,933 ♪ ♪ 2 00:00:03,933 --> 00:00:08,500 ELLA AL-SHAMAHI: Neanderthals roamed for around 400,000 years. 3 00:00:08,500 --> 00:00:11,333 Why did they go extinct 4 00:00:11,333 --> 00:00:15,166 and Homo sapiens survive? 5 00:00:15,166 --> 00:00:17,500 If you were going to place a bet 6 00:00:17,500 --> 00:00:19,800 on who would be left standing, 7 00:00:19,800 --> 00:00:22,133 you'd probably bet it wouldn't be us. 8 00:00:22,133 --> 00:00:24,966 The traces Neanderthals left behind 9 00:00:24,966 --> 00:00:28,766 are transforming our understanding of them. 10 00:00:28,766 --> 00:00:30,700 The Neanderthals were masters of their environment. 11 00:00:30,700 --> 00:00:34,300 They had evolved here for hundreds of thousands of years. 12 00:00:35,666 --> 00:00:38,200 And then they met us. 13 00:00:38,200 --> 00:00:39,866 ♪ ♪ 14 00:00:39,866 --> 00:00:41,733 SILVIU CONSTANTIN: Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interbreeding, 15 00:00:41,733 --> 00:00:44,266 people were just not ready to accept that. 16 00:00:44,266 --> 00:00:45,600 ♪ ♪ 17 00:00:45,600 --> 00:00:47,266 AL-SHAMAHI: What really happened 18 00:00:47,266 --> 00:00:50,866 to our powerful human cousins? 19 00:00:50,866 --> 00:00:54,833 ♪ ♪ 20 00:00:54,833 --> 00:00:59,466 "Human: Neanderthal Encounters," 21 00:00:59,466 --> 00:01:02,733 right now, on "NOVA." 22 00:01:05,200 --> 00:01:09,033 ♪ ♪ 23 00:01:32,900 --> 00:01:35,966 (water flowing) 24 00:01:35,966 --> 00:01:39,600 (wind howling) 25 00:01:43,733 --> 00:01:47,600 (panting) 26 00:01:47,600 --> 00:01:49,066 (yelps) 27 00:01:52,033 --> 00:01:54,666 (grunts) 28 00:01:54,666 --> 00:01:57,700 (gasping) 29 00:01:57,700 --> 00:02:00,500 (grunting) 30 00:02:00,500 --> 00:02:06,300 (baby crying) 31 00:02:09,766 --> 00:02:14,166 AL-SHAMAHI: Sometime around 20,000 to 30,000 years ago, 32 00:02:14,166 --> 00:02:17,300 a child was born 33 00:02:17,300 --> 00:02:19,966 into a new world. 34 00:02:19,966 --> 00:02:23,000 The first child born onto a planet 35 00:02:23,000 --> 00:02:26,800 in which we, Homo sapiens, were alone. 36 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:32,000 ♪ ♪ 37 00:02:32,000 --> 00:02:34,300 This was the first time in history 38 00:02:34,300 --> 00:02:37,900 that only one species of human walked this Earth. 39 00:02:37,900 --> 00:02:39,466 (bird calling) 40 00:02:39,466 --> 00:02:42,666 All the others were now gone. 41 00:02:42,666 --> 00:02:45,200 And in a tale written by the sole survivors, 42 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:47,433 it's actually quite easy to forget 43 00:02:47,433 --> 00:02:50,333 that we weren't destined to be the only ones. 44 00:02:50,333 --> 00:02:52,066 And yet here we are. 45 00:02:52,066 --> 00:02:54,366 (animal calling in distance) 46 00:02:54,366 --> 00:02:56,066 How this happened 47 00:02:56,066 --> 00:02:59,700 is one of the most poignant chapters in the human story. 48 00:02:59,700 --> 00:03:02,066 And it's one that's etched into the DNA 49 00:03:02,066 --> 00:03:05,566 of every single one of us alive today. 50 00:03:05,566 --> 00:03:10,300 ♪ ♪ 51 00:03:20,133 --> 00:03:25,966 ♪ ♪ 52 00:03:25,966 --> 00:03:28,466 For hundreds of thousands of years, 53 00:03:28,466 --> 00:03:33,133 Homo sapiens evolved in Africa. 54 00:03:33,133 --> 00:03:37,466 ♪ ♪ 55 00:03:37,466 --> 00:03:39,133 60,000 years ago, 56 00:03:39,133 --> 00:03:44,933 some dispersed into the Middle East 57 00:03:44,933 --> 00:03:48,100 and, over generations, 58 00:03:48,100 --> 00:03:53,266 continued onwards as far as Australia. 59 00:03:53,266 --> 00:03:56,766 But our species didn't stop there. 60 00:03:56,766 --> 00:04:00,166 ♪ ♪ 61 00:04:00,166 --> 00:04:05,133 Other groups began to make their way north, into Europe. 62 00:04:09,500 --> 00:04:13,466 ♪ ♪ 63 00:04:13,466 --> 00:04:15,666 For thousands of years, 64 00:04:15,666 --> 00:04:18,133 Europe had been out of reach to Homo sapiens, 65 00:04:18,133 --> 00:04:21,833 repelled by its icy climate. 66 00:04:23,666 --> 00:04:27,900 ♪ ♪ 67 00:04:27,900 --> 00:04:30,433 But now a shift in conditions 68 00:04:30,433 --> 00:04:33,066 opened up a route into this new realm. 69 00:04:33,066 --> 00:04:37,133 (wind howling) 70 00:04:40,433 --> 00:04:42,800 And some members of our species 71 00:04:42,800 --> 00:04:45,300 left the familiar behind... 72 00:04:45,300 --> 00:04:48,400 ♪ ♪ 73 00:04:48,400 --> 00:04:51,833 ...and stepped into the unknown. 74 00:04:51,833 --> 00:04:56,866 ♪ ♪ 75 00:04:58,600 --> 00:05:02,100 We don't really know why they came. 76 00:05:02,100 --> 00:05:06,166 Was it a romantic notion, like pure curiosity, 77 00:05:06,166 --> 00:05:08,233 or was it something much more practical? 78 00:05:08,233 --> 00:05:09,766 Say, the need for food. 79 00:05:09,766 --> 00:05:12,666 Or perhaps it was the same forces 80 00:05:12,666 --> 00:05:14,466 that drive migrants today, 81 00:05:14,466 --> 00:05:16,666 that need for shelter and safety. 82 00:05:16,666 --> 00:05:20,900 ♪ ♪ 83 00:05:20,900 --> 00:05:23,733 We don't know the exact routes they took. 84 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:29,100 But by following rivers and coasts 85 00:05:29,100 --> 00:05:32,366 or wandering along mountain ranges like this... 86 00:05:32,366 --> 00:05:36,400 ♪ ♪ 87 00:05:39,100 --> 00:05:44,300 ♪ ♪ 88 00:05:44,300 --> 00:05:47,933 ...they slowly made their way into new lands. 89 00:05:51,233 --> 00:05:54,300 And not long after these migrants reached Europe, 90 00:05:54,300 --> 00:05:58,933 they would've encountered something unexpected. 91 00:05:58,933 --> 00:06:01,633 When they got here, they would have discovered 92 00:06:01,633 --> 00:06:04,700 that another species had beat them to it. 93 00:06:06,066 --> 00:06:12,100 ♪ ♪ 94 00:06:21,233 --> 00:06:25,833 Two other human species were widespread at the time. 95 00:06:25,833 --> 00:06:29,233 To the east, from Siberia to Southeast Asia, 96 00:06:29,233 --> 00:06:32,266 lived the mysterious Denisovans, 97 00:06:32,266 --> 00:06:37,466 known only to us from DNA preserved in a few fossils. 98 00:06:41,100 --> 00:06:43,400 Across lands to the west, 99 00:06:43,400 --> 00:06:47,500 all the way from Russia to the Atlantic coast of Europe, 100 00:06:47,500 --> 00:06:49,666 were the Neanderthals. 101 00:06:55,166 --> 00:06:58,233 Homo sapiens were latecomers to Europe. 102 00:06:58,233 --> 00:07:01,566 It had been home to the Neanderthals 103 00:07:01,566 --> 00:07:05,566 for almost 400,000 years before we showed up. 104 00:07:05,566 --> 00:07:08,366 ♪ ♪ 105 00:07:08,366 --> 00:07:12,166 Now, these Homo sapiens venturing into Europe 106 00:07:12,166 --> 00:07:14,500 would have met another sort of human. 107 00:07:19,133 --> 00:07:23,233 People who looked a lot like us, but with obvious differences. 108 00:07:26,566 --> 00:07:29,333 (wildlife chirping) 109 00:07:29,333 --> 00:07:33,266 We can only imagine what these early migrants 110 00:07:33,266 --> 00:07:36,666 would have made of this other species... 111 00:07:39,466 --> 00:07:41,433 ...when our two cultures, 112 00:07:41,433 --> 00:07:46,866 perhaps just two families, 113 00:07:46,866 --> 00:07:51,100 encountered each other for the first time. 114 00:07:51,100 --> 00:07:56,600 ♪ ♪ 115 00:08:02,400 --> 00:08:05,800 ♪ ♪ 116 00:08:15,066 --> 00:08:19,866 Neanderthals were close relatives of Homo sapiens, 117 00:08:19,866 --> 00:08:22,933 but we had evolved along separate branches 118 00:08:22,933 --> 00:08:25,200 of the human family tree. 119 00:08:27,600 --> 00:08:30,200 There's often this belief 120 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:32,166 that we evolved from Neanderthals, 121 00:08:32,166 --> 00:08:33,633 so we came from Neanderthals. 122 00:08:33,633 --> 00:08:34,866 Actually, that's incorrect. 123 00:08:34,866 --> 00:08:36,500 We shared a common ancestor with them, 124 00:08:36,500 --> 00:08:38,933 and then, due to chance and the environment, 125 00:08:38,933 --> 00:08:42,533 we went on these two really different evolutionary journeys. 126 00:08:42,533 --> 00:08:46,100 So, we evolved-- Homo sapiens-- for Africa. 127 00:08:46,100 --> 00:08:48,466 We ended up taller and leaner. 128 00:08:48,466 --> 00:08:50,166 Now, the Neanderthals 129 00:08:50,166 --> 00:08:54,966 evolved for much cooler, more wooded environments. 130 00:08:56,833 --> 00:08:58,300 So, they were shorter. 131 00:08:58,300 --> 00:09:02,633 On average, the males were about five-foot-five. 132 00:09:02,633 --> 00:09:04,900 They had shorter limbs 133 00:09:04,900 --> 00:09:08,766 and they seem to have had bigger torsos. 134 00:09:08,766 --> 00:09:11,700 And they used a lot of brute force 135 00:09:11,700 --> 00:09:15,133 because they were close-range hunters. 136 00:09:17,933 --> 00:09:20,566 The Neanderthals were masters of their environment. 137 00:09:20,566 --> 00:09:23,366 They had evolved here for hundreds of thousands of years. 138 00:09:23,366 --> 00:09:27,066 If you were going to place a bet on who would be left standing, 139 00:09:27,066 --> 00:09:29,366 you'd probably bet on the obvious choice, 140 00:09:29,366 --> 00:09:31,200 and it wouldn't be us. 141 00:09:31,200 --> 00:09:34,933 ♪ ♪ 142 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:40,700 Neanderthals were clearly highly skilled survivors. 143 00:09:45,033 --> 00:09:46,800 (slide projector clicks) 144 00:09:48,366 --> 00:09:50,233 Yet, in the 19th century, 145 00:09:50,233 --> 00:09:53,733 when the first Neanderthal fossils were unearthed... 146 00:09:53,733 --> 00:09:55,400 (slide projector clicks) 147 00:09:57,066 --> 00:09:59,666 ...scientists quickly jumped to conclusions... 148 00:09:59,666 --> 00:10:01,833 (slide projector clicks) 149 00:10:01,833 --> 00:10:04,800 ...that have persisted ever since. 150 00:10:06,666 --> 00:10:08,000 As a result, 151 00:10:08,000 --> 00:10:11,500 Neanderthals haven't had the best PR. 152 00:10:12,966 --> 00:10:15,033 If somebody calls you a Neanderthal, 153 00:10:15,033 --> 00:10:18,133 it's probably not a compliment, 154 00:10:18,133 --> 00:10:20,300 and that stereotype of Neanderthals 155 00:10:20,300 --> 00:10:22,166 has been with us since the very beginning. 156 00:10:22,166 --> 00:10:24,033 And it kind of suited us 157 00:10:24,033 --> 00:10:26,800 to see ourselves as the pinnacle of evolution 158 00:10:26,800 --> 00:10:29,200 and them as these knuckle-dragging ape men. 159 00:10:29,200 --> 00:10:31,333 But partly, that stereotype 160 00:10:31,333 --> 00:10:33,933 is actually just a mistake of science. 161 00:10:33,933 --> 00:10:36,333 Paleoanthropology at the time was quite a new science, 162 00:10:36,333 --> 00:10:38,033 and when they came to reconstruct 163 00:10:38,033 --> 00:10:40,433 this one Neanderthal, called La Chapelle-aux-Saints, 164 00:10:40,433 --> 00:10:43,600 they portrayed it as kind of really hunched over 165 00:10:43,600 --> 00:10:46,200 and knuckle-dragging, which was just wrong-- 166 00:10:46,200 --> 00:10:49,500 this kind of brutish, hairy Neanderthal, 167 00:10:49,500 --> 00:10:51,433 looking like it's about to attack. 168 00:10:51,433 --> 00:10:53,433 It's incredibly aggressive. 169 00:10:53,433 --> 00:10:56,700 (exhales): I personally love Neanderthals, 170 00:10:56,700 --> 00:10:58,866 and the more we learn about them, 171 00:10:58,866 --> 00:11:00,500 the more we study them, 172 00:11:00,500 --> 00:11:02,500 the more we discover about them, 173 00:11:02,500 --> 00:11:04,400 the more we realize that this 174 00:11:04,400 --> 00:11:06,466 is actually incredibly incorrect. 175 00:11:06,466 --> 00:11:11,500 ♪ ♪ 176 00:11:14,466 --> 00:11:19,233 This now-outdated image of the simple, brutish caveman 177 00:11:19,233 --> 00:11:21,766 is finally being replaced... 178 00:11:23,800 --> 00:11:25,700 ...with a picture 179 00:11:25,700 --> 00:11:29,166 of a once-vibrant, thriving culture. 180 00:11:29,166 --> 00:11:32,833 ♪ ♪ 181 00:11:32,833 --> 00:11:34,600 We keep finding things at Neanderthal sites 182 00:11:34,600 --> 00:11:37,433 that really challenge us. 183 00:11:37,433 --> 00:11:40,200 Things like beaded shells with pigmentation on them, 184 00:11:40,200 --> 00:11:43,600 almost like they're being used as necklaces. 185 00:11:43,600 --> 00:11:47,266 Eagle talons, probably for a similar purpose. 186 00:11:47,266 --> 00:11:50,833 And then there's my actual favorite, 187 00:11:50,833 --> 00:11:53,066 which is evidence of feathers. 188 00:11:53,066 --> 00:11:54,633 But not just any feathers. 189 00:11:54,633 --> 00:11:56,600 No, the Neanderthals seemed to be really interested 190 00:11:56,600 --> 00:12:00,600 in black and colored feathers from things like red kites. 191 00:12:00,600 --> 00:12:02,766 And you've got to wonder, 192 00:12:02,766 --> 00:12:06,566 why were they so interested in those particular colors? 193 00:12:06,566 --> 00:12:08,600 And it's presumably 'cause they're high-value, 194 00:12:08,600 --> 00:12:09,900 they're beautiful. 195 00:12:09,900 --> 00:12:13,033 ♪ ♪ 196 00:12:13,033 --> 00:12:14,566 You kind of have an impression of them 197 00:12:14,566 --> 00:12:17,166 as having these incredible headdresses, 198 00:12:17,166 --> 00:12:19,633 or maybe cloaks made of these brilliant, bright feathers. 199 00:12:19,633 --> 00:12:24,133 ♪ ♪ 200 00:12:24,133 --> 00:12:25,966 When you put this all together, 201 00:12:25,966 --> 00:12:28,433 you paint a picture of a Neanderthal 202 00:12:28,433 --> 00:12:30,500 not as this aggressive creature, 203 00:12:30,500 --> 00:12:33,333 standing behind a rock with a massive club, 204 00:12:33,333 --> 00:12:35,133 but actually as 205 00:12:35,133 --> 00:12:37,366 these beings very interested in adorning themselves. 206 00:12:37,366 --> 00:12:39,533 ♪ ♪ 207 00:12:39,533 --> 00:12:42,533 Interested in looking beautiful, with necklaces 208 00:12:42,533 --> 00:12:45,600 and gorgeous colored headdresses. 209 00:12:45,600 --> 00:12:49,500 ♪ ♪ 210 00:12:49,500 --> 00:12:52,833 Suddenly, you're looking at beings 211 00:12:52,833 --> 00:12:55,866 who aren't just interested in food and shelter. 212 00:12:55,866 --> 00:12:58,833 They're interested in the way they are seen by the world. 213 00:12:59,966 --> 00:13:01,866 This, all this, 214 00:13:01,866 --> 00:13:04,433 makes them tangibly human. 215 00:13:04,433 --> 00:13:10,033 ♪ ♪ 216 00:13:10,033 --> 00:13:11,833 For thousands of years, 217 00:13:11,833 --> 00:13:15,433 Homo sapiens and Neanderthals lived in close proximity. 218 00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:20,500 But how close were we? 219 00:13:22,600 --> 00:13:27,666 ♪ ♪ 220 00:13:29,366 --> 00:13:31,733 For decades, most assumed 221 00:13:31,733 --> 00:13:34,100 interbreeding between our two species 222 00:13:34,100 --> 00:13:35,600 didn't happen. 223 00:13:39,900 --> 00:13:42,400 But in the early 2000s, 224 00:13:42,400 --> 00:13:44,266 this was called into question... 225 00:13:44,266 --> 00:13:45,866 (slide projector clicking) 226 00:13:47,066 --> 00:13:50,933 ...by new finds in Romania, 227 00:13:50,933 --> 00:13:53,033 bone fragments dating back 228 00:13:53,033 --> 00:13:57,166 to around 40,000 years ago, 229 00:13:57,166 --> 00:14:00,000 which were painstakingly reassembled 230 00:14:00,000 --> 00:14:04,566 to reveal humans with a mysterious mix of features. 231 00:14:09,033 --> 00:14:10,833 It even smells... 232 00:14:10,833 --> 00:14:12,666 (sniffs): ...like a fossil. 233 00:14:12,666 --> 00:14:15,333 This, I assume, is Oase 1. 234 00:14:15,333 --> 00:14:17,300 This one is Oase 1. 235 00:14:17,300 --> 00:14:19,466 And that's Oase 2. 236 00:14:19,466 --> 00:14:20,833 Skull-- that's Oase 2. 237 00:14:20,833 --> 00:14:22,266 This is quite special, 238 00:14:22,266 --> 00:14:24,366 'cause I've read about them, 239 00:14:24,366 --> 00:14:25,700 I've studied them. 240 00:14:25,700 --> 00:14:28,133 They're hugely significant fossils, 241 00:14:28,133 --> 00:14:29,466 but I've never... 242 00:14:29,466 --> 00:14:31,433 I've never seen the originals. 243 00:14:31,433 --> 00:14:33,666 I've never been this close to them, it's... 244 00:14:33,666 --> 00:14:36,666 It looks and it is a modern Homo sapiens... 245 00:14:36,666 --> 00:14:38,000 Yeah. 246 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:40,233 But it has some features which, 247 00:14:40,233 --> 00:14:43,133 which are more like Neanderthal. Yeah. 248 00:14:43,133 --> 00:14:44,666 Like this one, it's quite clear 249 00:14:44,666 --> 00:14:46,533 it's a mandible of a modern human 250 00:14:46,533 --> 00:14:47,966 with this, this chin. 251 00:14:47,966 --> 00:14:49,300 Because it's, there's a chin. There's a chin, yeah. 252 00:14:49,300 --> 00:14:50,500 And Neanderthals don't have a chin, 253 00:14:50,500 --> 00:14:51,500 Neanderthals' chin kind of recedes. 254 00:14:51,500 --> 00:14:53,633 But then you, you see the, 255 00:14:53,633 --> 00:14:55,200 the size of the molars. Yeah. 256 00:14:55,200 --> 00:14:56,533 Which are really huge. 257 00:14:56,533 --> 00:14:57,933 More a Neanderthal feature. 258 00:14:57,933 --> 00:14:59,933 Modern sapiens... Yeah. 259 00:14:59,933 --> 00:15:02,500 ...but with Neanderthal teeth. 260 00:15:02,500 --> 00:15:05,866 Yeah, Oase 2 has the same hybrid features. 261 00:15:05,866 --> 00:15:06,866 Mm-hmm. 262 00:15:06,866 --> 00:15:07,900 Like, if you look at the face. 263 00:15:07,900 --> 00:15:09,566 You look at that and you, 264 00:15:09,566 --> 00:15:11,033 you do think that's 265 00:15:11,033 --> 00:15:12,533 Homo sapiens. 266 00:15:12,533 --> 00:15:14,333 And then it has these features on it, 267 00:15:14,333 --> 00:15:16,066 which are 268 00:15:16,066 --> 00:15:17,366 more Neanderthal, 269 00:15:17,366 --> 00:15:18,700 like this occipital bone here at the back, 270 00:15:18,700 --> 00:15:21,266 that bulge at the back of the skull here. 271 00:15:21,266 --> 00:15:23,900 Yeah, that's kind of strange. 272 00:15:23,900 --> 00:15:25,633 It's not a Neanderthal, but it's, 273 00:15:25,633 --> 00:15:28,200 it has Neanderthal features, 274 00:15:28,200 --> 00:15:32,133 which prompt us to think about some sort of interbreeding. 275 00:15:32,133 --> 00:15:34,733 Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interbreeding, 276 00:15:34,733 --> 00:15:37,600 it was pretty controversial. 277 00:15:37,600 --> 00:15:40,366 People were just not ready to accept that. 278 00:15:40,366 --> 00:15:43,366 ♪ ♪ 279 00:15:46,733 --> 00:15:49,633 AL-SHAMAHI: Around a decade after the bones were discovered 280 00:15:49,633 --> 00:15:52,666 came a revolutionary breakthrough. 281 00:15:53,966 --> 00:15:57,300 Advances in genetic analysis allowed scientists 282 00:15:57,300 --> 00:16:01,100 to extract DNA from ancient fossils. 283 00:16:01,100 --> 00:16:05,133 ♪ ♪ 284 00:16:05,133 --> 00:16:07,200 Proving these two species 285 00:16:07,200 --> 00:16:11,333 could and did produce offspring. 286 00:16:13,466 --> 00:16:15,700 How did it feel to be proven right, 287 00:16:15,700 --> 00:16:17,133 to be vindicated, 288 00:16:17,133 --> 00:16:19,033 especially over something so controversial? 289 00:16:19,033 --> 00:16:21,600 I feeled, felt relieved. 290 00:16:21,600 --> 00:16:23,400 Yeah. 291 00:16:23,400 --> 00:16:25,100 Like, "Okay." (chuckles) 292 00:16:25,100 --> 00:16:26,100 "Now you know." 293 00:16:26,100 --> 00:16:28,233 (chuckles) (laughs silently) 294 00:16:28,233 --> 00:16:29,933 Yeah, we were happy to be right. 295 00:16:29,933 --> 00:16:30,966 (chuckles) Yeah. 296 00:16:32,166 --> 00:16:34,433 You know, there's people who spend their whole lives, 297 00:16:34,433 --> 00:16:37,300 their whole lives, trying to find a fossil 298 00:16:37,300 --> 00:16:39,266 as significant as this, 299 00:16:39,266 --> 00:16:41,833 and... 300 00:16:41,833 --> 00:16:44,366 Wow, that's just amazing. 301 00:16:44,366 --> 00:16:46,633 ♪ ♪ 302 00:16:46,633 --> 00:16:51,733 (wildlife chittering) 303 00:16:51,733 --> 00:16:54,166 AL-SHAMAHI: Since the discovery of Oase 1, 304 00:16:54,166 --> 00:16:56,600 evidence has continued to grow, 305 00:16:56,600 --> 00:17:00,300 proving hybrids like this were not just possible, 306 00:17:00,300 --> 00:17:03,300 but may have been relatively common. 307 00:17:05,966 --> 00:17:08,066 We'll never know the full story 308 00:17:08,066 --> 00:17:09,933 of Oase 1 and the other hybrids. 309 00:17:09,933 --> 00:17:11,900 And to be honest, we'll never know 310 00:17:11,900 --> 00:17:14,666 the full circumstances under which they were conceived. 311 00:17:14,666 --> 00:17:16,033 For all we know, 312 00:17:16,033 --> 00:17:17,566 it could have been non-consensual, 313 00:17:17,566 --> 00:17:20,900 or it could have been the result of a romantic notion, like love. 314 00:17:20,900 --> 00:17:23,466 Or it might have been the result of a practical decision, 315 00:17:23,466 --> 00:17:24,733 like as part of a trade agreement. 316 00:17:24,733 --> 00:17:28,533 ♪ ♪ 317 00:17:28,533 --> 00:17:31,166 But whatever it was, 318 00:17:31,166 --> 00:17:34,666 what must it have been like to have been a hybrid child? 319 00:17:37,866 --> 00:17:40,333 Did these children feel like they belonged 320 00:17:40,333 --> 00:17:42,700 or were they teased and ostracized? 321 00:17:45,166 --> 00:17:48,033 We'll never know, but what we do know, 322 00:17:48,033 --> 00:17:50,533 because I held Oase 1 in my hands, 323 00:17:50,533 --> 00:17:52,900 is that they existed. 324 00:17:52,900 --> 00:17:54,866 And so, somebody loved them, 325 00:17:54,866 --> 00:17:57,433 and somebody was raising them to adulthood. 326 00:17:57,433 --> 00:17:59,600 And so, we tangibly know 327 00:17:59,600 --> 00:18:01,900 that the Neanderthals and the Homo sapiens, 328 00:18:01,900 --> 00:18:04,600 they didn't just meet, they joined. 329 00:18:04,600 --> 00:18:09,633 ♪ ♪ 330 00:18:11,266 --> 00:18:13,966 We now know that for a time, at least, 331 00:18:13,966 --> 00:18:15,800 Homo sapiens and Neanderthals 332 00:18:15,800 --> 00:18:18,866 managed to live alongside one another. 333 00:18:23,033 --> 00:18:25,233 But survival in this region 334 00:18:25,233 --> 00:18:29,166 meant braving challenging conditions 335 00:18:29,166 --> 00:18:33,033 that would push both species to their limits. 336 00:18:37,300 --> 00:18:40,566 (wind howling) 337 00:18:40,566 --> 00:18:43,800 Because it's likely Homo sapiens arrived here 338 00:18:43,800 --> 00:18:47,133 during a brief thaw in the weather. 339 00:18:47,133 --> 00:18:52,766 And by doing so, they had walked into a trap. 340 00:18:52,766 --> 00:18:57,800 ♪ ♪ 341 00:19:05,566 --> 00:19:08,266 Within just a few centuries, 342 00:19:08,266 --> 00:19:11,100 Europe's winters became colder, 343 00:19:11,100 --> 00:19:14,966 drier, and more hostile. 344 00:19:14,966 --> 00:19:18,133 Unrecognizable to us today. 345 00:19:18,133 --> 00:19:21,633 ♪ ♪ 346 00:19:21,633 --> 00:19:26,366 Rainfall in some areas fell to half its modern level 347 00:19:26,366 --> 00:19:30,833 and much of the continent became tundra, 348 00:19:30,833 --> 00:19:33,500 a vast, inhospitable plain. 349 00:19:33,500 --> 00:19:36,900 ♪ ♪ 350 00:19:39,800 --> 00:19:42,800 Homo sapiens had to try to adjust 351 00:19:42,800 --> 00:19:45,166 to this colder world. 352 00:19:46,700 --> 00:19:52,733 ♪ ♪ 353 00:20:00,433 --> 00:20:02,833 There's no way for them to have known it, 354 00:20:02,833 --> 00:20:05,300 but before the first Homo sapiens arrived, 355 00:20:05,300 --> 00:20:07,966 most of Europe would've been in the depths of winter. 356 00:20:09,966 --> 00:20:12,500 Ice sheets like this one would have spread from here 357 00:20:12,500 --> 00:20:15,233 all the way down to Britain. 358 00:20:18,033 --> 00:20:22,033 It's currently minus-eight degrees. 359 00:20:22,033 --> 00:20:25,566 I am wearing so many layers, it's actually ridiculous. 360 00:20:25,566 --> 00:20:28,900 And yet, I am still completely miserable. 361 00:20:28,900 --> 00:20:31,900 It is so cold, I can't feel parts of my face. 362 00:20:33,400 --> 00:20:36,133 These families, they were here, 363 00:20:36,133 --> 00:20:39,100 and they were trying to keep young children alive. 364 00:20:39,100 --> 00:20:42,033 These conditions would have been life-threatening. 365 00:20:42,033 --> 00:20:47,066 ♪ ♪ 366 00:20:49,500 --> 00:20:52,700 While Homo sapiens had originally adapted 367 00:20:52,700 --> 00:20:55,500 to the warmer weather in Africa... 368 00:20:55,500 --> 00:20:59,466 ♪ ♪ 369 00:20:59,466 --> 00:21:03,333 ...Neanderthals had evolved to survive in colder climates 370 00:21:03,333 --> 00:21:07,700 over almost 400,000 years. 371 00:21:13,666 --> 00:21:16,433 It's thought they stored more brown fat 372 00:21:16,433 --> 00:21:18,400 than Homo sapiens. 373 00:21:18,400 --> 00:21:22,500 This burns more calories and generates more heat, 374 00:21:22,500 --> 00:21:25,700 conserving energy in the cold. 375 00:21:28,533 --> 00:21:30,900 And their larger nasal passages 376 00:21:30,900 --> 00:21:33,833 provided increased surface area, 377 00:21:33,833 --> 00:21:36,833 warming and moistening the icy air 378 00:21:36,833 --> 00:21:39,466 before it reached the lungs. 379 00:21:42,333 --> 00:21:46,366 ♪ ♪ 380 00:21:52,166 --> 00:21:55,433 Without the Neanderthals' adaptations or knowledge, 381 00:21:55,433 --> 00:21:58,100 these early European Homo sapiens 382 00:21:58,100 --> 00:22:01,000 would have been doing everything they could 383 00:22:01,000 --> 00:22:03,500 just to cling on. 384 00:22:03,500 --> 00:22:08,466 ♪ ♪ 385 00:22:08,466 --> 00:22:10,266 And yet, the bitter cold 386 00:22:10,266 --> 00:22:12,266 was just the beginning. 387 00:22:12,266 --> 00:22:15,466 ♪ ♪ 388 00:22:20,000 --> 00:22:24,166 This glacier is a remnant of one of the great ice sheets 389 00:22:24,166 --> 00:22:28,333 that have grown and shrunk from the poles for millennia. 390 00:22:33,300 --> 00:22:36,333 Deep within are clues about the world 391 00:22:36,333 --> 00:22:40,300 these Homo sapiens would have found themselves in. 392 00:22:46,900 --> 00:22:49,033 ANN ROWAN: We're working in mountain glaciers 393 00:22:49,033 --> 00:22:51,333 like Folgefonna because we can use 394 00:22:51,333 --> 00:22:53,433 the evidence of how the glaciers have changed 395 00:22:53,433 --> 00:22:55,200 in the past to understand 396 00:22:55,200 --> 00:22:57,166 how they behaved in response to climate change. 397 00:22:57,166 --> 00:22:59,333 Many of the places we live in now, 398 00:22:59,333 --> 00:23:00,666 where I live in Bergen, 399 00:23:00,666 --> 00:23:03,166 would have been underneath a kilometer of ice. 400 00:23:03,166 --> 00:23:06,266 AL-SHAMAHI: Yeah, I mean, there were times when Britain was part of that. 401 00:23:06,266 --> 00:23:08,366 ROWAN: So, this is where we're drilling the ice core. AL-SHAMAHI: Yeah. 402 00:23:08,366 --> 00:23:09,800 So, it's manual drilling, then? 403 00:23:09,800 --> 00:23:11,200 ROWAN: Yes, exactly, and there's blades at the bottom 404 00:23:11,200 --> 00:23:12,533 that are cutting through the ice 405 00:23:12,533 --> 00:23:13,833 that would... How tough is that? 406 00:23:13,833 --> 00:23:15,333 That's, it's quite, it can be quite hard work. Yes. 407 00:23:16,366 --> 00:23:17,966 ROWAN: And then we lift it out 408 00:23:17,966 --> 00:23:19,800 and we bring it over here. 409 00:23:22,166 --> 00:23:23,800 You can see... AL-SHAMAHI: Look at that. 410 00:23:23,800 --> 00:23:26,266 If we hold it up to the light, we can see the air bubbles. 411 00:23:26,266 --> 00:23:27,566 So basically, 412 00:23:27,566 --> 00:23:29,033 this is effectively a time capsule. 413 00:23:29,033 --> 00:23:30,366 Yes. 414 00:23:30,366 --> 00:23:32,900 And this is young ice from Folgefonna glacier. 415 00:23:32,900 --> 00:23:34,466 (slide projector clicking) 416 00:23:36,066 --> 00:23:38,566 ROWAN: But if this was deep, old ice core, 417 00:23:38,566 --> 00:23:40,733 those air bubbles would tell us about 418 00:23:40,733 --> 00:23:42,733 what the atmosphere was like in the past. 419 00:23:44,400 --> 00:23:46,200 We can look at what we see... 420 00:23:46,200 --> 00:23:47,566 Mm-hmm. ...from the ice cores in Greenland. 421 00:23:47,566 --> 00:23:50,400 This shows us how the climate changed through that period 422 00:23:50,400 --> 00:23:51,866 in the North Atlantic region. Yeah. 423 00:23:51,866 --> 00:23:55,933 There was a relatively cold but stable climate... Mm-hmm. 424 00:23:55,933 --> 00:23:57,833 ...from 70,000 to 60,000 years ago. 425 00:23:57,833 --> 00:24:00,500 And then, between 60,000 and 30,000 years ago, 426 00:24:00,500 --> 00:24:02,233 the climate in this region jumped 427 00:24:02,233 --> 00:24:04,133 by eight to ten degrees warmer... 428 00:24:04,133 --> 00:24:06,900 Mm-hmm. ...over maybe one or two decades. 429 00:24:06,900 --> 00:24:08,666 That's quite a lot, yeah. It's huge, it's huge. 430 00:24:08,666 --> 00:24:11,000 And that cycle is repeated all through that period. 431 00:24:11,000 --> 00:24:13,500 And then it cooled again, and then jumped, 432 00:24:13,500 --> 00:24:14,566 and this carried on, 433 00:24:14,566 --> 00:24:16,733 and we see then a cold 434 00:24:16,733 --> 00:24:18,566 but slightly more stable climate before we 435 00:24:18,566 --> 00:24:20,566 then warm into the present day. 436 00:24:20,566 --> 00:24:23,033 I mean, how do you exist 437 00:24:23,033 --> 00:24:24,666 if the climate changes like that, 438 00:24:24,666 --> 00:24:26,966 in such an extreme fashion? Well, it's very challenging. 439 00:24:26,966 --> 00:24:30,100 It's, it's maybe not even possible, because 440 00:24:30,100 --> 00:24:32,300 everything you know about how to live, how to... 441 00:24:32,300 --> 00:24:34,300 Yeah. ...raise children 442 00:24:34,300 --> 00:24:36,300 becomes, in ten, 20 years, totally changes. Obsolete. 443 00:24:36,300 --> 00:24:37,500 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Totally changes. 444 00:24:37,500 --> 00:24:41,833 ♪ ♪ 445 00:24:41,833 --> 00:24:45,133 AL-SHAMAHI: Over just a few hundred years, 446 00:24:45,133 --> 00:24:47,766 entire ecosystems transformed. 447 00:24:47,766 --> 00:24:53,600 ♪ ♪ 448 00:24:53,600 --> 00:24:55,933 Forests became barren plains... 449 00:24:55,933 --> 00:25:01,033 ♪ ♪ 450 00:25:02,100 --> 00:25:06,033 ...lakes dried up, 451 00:25:06,033 --> 00:25:08,533 and rivers froze over. 452 00:25:08,533 --> 00:25:12,566 ♪ ♪ 453 00:25:15,033 --> 00:25:19,366 The real enemy wasn't just cold, 454 00:25:19,366 --> 00:25:21,566 it was change. 455 00:25:26,600 --> 00:25:29,633 As landscapes shifted, 456 00:25:29,633 --> 00:25:32,366 herds of animals disappeared... 457 00:25:32,366 --> 00:25:36,666 ♪ ♪ 458 00:25:36,666 --> 00:25:39,300 ...and sources of food grew scarce. 459 00:25:39,300 --> 00:25:41,133 (reindeer grunting) 460 00:25:42,900 --> 00:25:47,300 ♪ ♪ 461 00:25:47,300 --> 00:25:50,866 Imagine what it would be like for our ancestors 462 00:25:50,866 --> 00:25:52,466 to live in this world 463 00:25:52,466 --> 00:25:54,433 where the land of their grandparents 464 00:25:54,433 --> 00:25:57,166 was not the land of their grandchildren. 465 00:25:57,166 --> 00:25:59,000 And when that happens, 466 00:25:59,000 --> 00:26:00,700 intergenerational knowledge, 467 00:26:00,700 --> 00:26:03,533 knowledge that's passed on from one generation to the next, 468 00:26:03,533 --> 00:26:07,200 that's so important for survival in these environments, 469 00:26:07,200 --> 00:26:08,566 suddenly, 470 00:26:08,566 --> 00:26:11,433 that knowledge isn't actually very useful, 471 00:26:11,433 --> 00:26:13,366 because the plants, the animals, 472 00:26:13,366 --> 00:26:16,233 the landscape, it's all different. 473 00:26:19,566 --> 00:26:23,900 To survive, Homo sapiens had to be adaptable... 474 00:26:26,033 --> 00:26:31,000 ...roaming farther in search of dwindling resources 475 00:26:31,000 --> 00:26:33,033 that might not be there. 476 00:26:38,733 --> 00:26:42,266 Homo sapiens and Neanderthals would have been forced 477 00:26:42,266 --> 00:26:46,533 to look for better conditions wherever they could... 478 00:26:46,533 --> 00:26:51,033 ♪ ♪ 479 00:26:51,033 --> 00:26:54,700 ...and seek refuge in the few habitable places 480 00:26:54,700 --> 00:26:56,666 they could find. 481 00:27:05,800 --> 00:27:10,833 ♪ ♪ 482 00:27:13,933 --> 00:27:16,133 55,000 years ago, 483 00:27:16,133 --> 00:27:20,833 the south of France was still in the thick of the ice age. 484 00:27:24,333 --> 00:27:26,333 Yet compared to the deep freeze of the north, 485 00:27:26,333 --> 00:27:30,600 it was one of the more bearable places 486 00:27:30,600 --> 00:27:33,166 in an otherwise hostile landscape. 487 00:27:40,433 --> 00:27:43,300 And here, at Grotte Mandrin, 488 00:27:43,300 --> 00:27:46,433 archaeologists have spent over three decades 489 00:27:46,433 --> 00:27:49,000 unearthing its secrets... 490 00:27:50,833 --> 00:27:52,533 ...layer by layer... 491 00:27:54,133 --> 00:27:57,466 ...revealing a place that was home to Neanderthals 492 00:27:57,466 --> 00:28:00,200 for more than 80,000 years. 493 00:28:03,600 --> 00:28:05,300 Shoes off. Yes. 494 00:28:05,300 --> 00:28:06,433 There we go. 495 00:28:06,433 --> 00:28:07,533 LUDOVIC SLIMAK: And we are barefoot 496 00:28:07,533 --> 00:28:10,100 because if there was a flint or a bone 497 00:28:10,100 --> 00:28:12,733 below your feet, you will immediately feel it. 498 00:28:14,366 --> 00:28:17,533 SLIMAK: It's a pretty slow work-- as you can see, 499 00:28:17,533 --> 00:28:19,566 we only excavated something 500 00:28:19,566 --> 00:28:21,966 like 50 to 60 centimeters 501 00:28:21,966 --> 00:28:23,333 for 33 years. 502 00:28:25,866 --> 00:28:27,700 So here we have a very nice section 503 00:28:27,700 --> 00:28:30,133 where we can understand what happened. 504 00:28:30,133 --> 00:28:31,600 So you have yellow, black... 505 00:28:31,600 --> 00:28:33,333 Yeah. ...orange. 506 00:28:33,333 --> 00:28:35,266 So it's like a barcode. 507 00:28:36,000 --> 00:28:37,333 And so right there, 508 00:28:37,333 --> 00:28:39,766 about there, we are at 42,000. 509 00:28:39,766 --> 00:28:42,133 By here, we are at 50,000. Uh-huh. 510 00:28:42,133 --> 00:28:43,900 And there, this step here 511 00:28:43,900 --> 00:28:46,566 of yellow sands, we are at 54,000. 512 00:28:46,566 --> 00:28:49,900 So what you're seeing here is phases of occupation 513 00:28:49,900 --> 00:28:51,666 over 80,000 years. 514 00:28:51,666 --> 00:28:53,933 Yeah. And because you've got incredible resolution, 515 00:28:53,933 --> 00:28:56,366 you can really hone in on that. 516 00:28:56,366 --> 00:28:58,133 SLIMAK: There we have all 517 00:28:58,133 --> 00:29:00,500 the records of all the societies, how they were living. 518 00:29:01,666 --> 00:29:03,666 You can precisely reconstruct 519 00:29:03,666 --> 00:29:06,766 how these people were living in the landscape. 520 00:29:06,766 --> 00:29:10,466 ♪ ♪ 521 00:29:10,466 --> 00:29:13,900 AL-SHAMAHI: For millennia, this cave was home to Neanderthals. 522 00:29:19,033 --> 00:29:22,433 But one layer stood out, 523 00:29:22,433 --> 00:29:25,300 containing finely crafted tools. 524 00:29:26,900 --> 00:29:31,533 ♪ ♪ 525 00:29:31,533 --> 00:29:33,500 Small and precise. 526 00:29:35,166 --> 00:29:37,166 Techniques that suggested they were made 527 00:29:37,166 --> 00:29:41,100 not by Neanderthals, but by Homo sapiens. 528 00:29:49,400 --> 00:29:51,800 A suspicion confirmed 529 00:29:51,800 --> 00:29:55,400 when the earth revealed another treasure. 530 00:29:58,933 --> 00:30:01,800 So, this is a molar... 531 00:30:01,800 --> 00:30:03,400 Mm-hmm. ...from a child, 532 00:30:03,400 --> 00:30:07,166 from a sapiens, dated at 54,000. 533 00:30:07,166 --> 00:30:11,100 AL-SHAMAHI: That, then, is conclusive evidence 534 00:30:11,100 --> 00:30:14,700 that that layer, with those strange, 535 00:30:14,700 --> 00:30:16,366 unusual stone tools... Yeah. 536 00:30:16,366 --> 00:30:17,833 ...is definitely a Homo sapien layer. Yes. 537 00:30:17,833 --> 00:30:20,600 These elements that allow us to rewrite 538 00:30:20,600 --> 00:30:22,833 a large part of the history of Europe. 539 00:30:26,533 --> 00:30:29,566 AL-SHAMAHI: These discoveries tell us a story of one group 540 00:30:29,566 --> 00:30:31,600 of Homo sapiens. 541 00:30:33,166 --> 00:30:35,566 Among the first to come to Europe. 542 00:30:35,566 --> 00:30:40,133 ♪ ♪ 543 00:30:40,133 --> 00:30:42,966 They had ventured into Neanderthal territory... 544 00:30:45,033 --> 00:30:49,533 ...seeking refuge in this cave in the depths of the ice age. 545 00:30:51,733 --> 00:30:53,633 When we imagine the past, we often 546 00:30:53,633 --> 00:30:55,166 don't imagine children. 547 00:30:55,166 --> 00:30:57,200 We imagine, well, a man, a caveman. 548 00:30:57,200 --> 00:30:58,200 Yeah. (laughs): Right? 549 00:30:58,200 --> 00:30:59,566 But actually, these were 550 00:30:59,566 --> 00:31:01,333 "cavechildren." 551 00:31:01,333 --> 00:31:03,933 But imagine to have been born, 552 00:31:03,933 --> 00:31:06,366 the first of your people to, to turn up there. 553 00:31:06,366 --> 00:31:08,666 And we don't know-- they might have been born somewhere else. 554 00:31:08,666 --> 00:31:10,766 Yeah, but the kids, we don't... But it's fascinating. 555 00:31:10,766 --> 00:31:12,433 Fantastic, yes. Wow. 556 00:31:12,433 --> 00:31:14,600 Suddenly, it became something very concrete. 557 00:31:18,266 --> 00:31:20,633 AL-SHAMAHI: Using advanced dating techniques, 558 00:31:20,633 --> 00:31:24,833 the team were able to uncover even more precise details 559 00:31:24,833 --> 00:31:28,400 about the people who lived here. 560 00:31:30,866 --> 00:31:32,866 When you see this dark line here, 561 00:31:32,866 --> 00:31:34,366 all what is dark here 562 00:31:34,366 --> 00:31:37,633 is due to the burning wood, burning bones. 563 00:31:38,700 --> 00:31:40,800 It's when people come in the cave, 564 00:31:40,800 --> 00:31:41,933 they make fire, 565 00:31:41,933 --> 00:31:43,600 and the roof became black. 566 00:31:43,600 --> 00:31:45,733 AL-SHAMAHI: So, people were building fires. Yeah. 567 00:31:45,733 --> 00:31:47,200 The fire created soot. 568 00:31:47,200 --> 00:31:48,966 That would end up on the roof. Exactly. 569 00:31:48,966 --> 00:31:51,600 And then bits of the roof would collapse and end up 570 00:31:51,600 --> 00:31:53,500 in your archaeological layers. (chuckling) SLIMAK: Yes. 571 00:31:53,500 --> 00:31:55,833 AL-SHAMAHI: It's literally telling you 572 00:31:55,833 --> 00:31:57,400 when they're using this place. SLIMAK: Exactly. 573 00:31:59,766 --> 00:32:02,300 AL-SHAMAHI: By counting the microscopic layers of soot 574 00:32:02,300 --> 00:32:04,600 deposited on the cave ceiling, 575 00:32:04,600 --> 00:32:08,133 the team could tell how often these people came here. 576 00:32:10,566 --> 00:32:13,000 SLIMAK: The soot allow us to know 577 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:15,466 that they came once a year 578 00:32:15,466 --> 00:32:17,266 during 40 years. 579 00:32:17,266 --> 00:32:20,466 40 years, it's a lifetime! 580 00:32:20,466 --> 00:32:22,300 But what happened to them? 581 00:32:22,300 --> 00:32:24,366 We know that after 40 years, 582 00:32:24,366 --> 00:32:27,800 suddenly, the population are no longer here. 583 00:32:27,800 --> 00:32:29,633 Did they die? 584 00:32:29,633 --> 00:32:31,033 Did they move on another territory? 585 00:32:31,033 --> 00:32:32,366 We just don't know. 586 00:32:32,366 --> 00:32:37,400 ♪ ♪ 587 00:32:39,166 --> 00:32:42,200 AL-SHAMAHI: This exceptional site tells the story 588 00:32:42,200 --> 00:32:45,266 of a pioneering group of Homo sapiens 589 00:32:45,266 --> 00:32:48,033 who lived here in a break 590 00:32:48,033 --> 00:32:52,666 between tens of thousands of years of Neanderthal occupation. 591 00:32:54,866 --> 00:32:58,533 But then, all traces of them vanished. 592 00:32:58,533 --> 00:33:01,500 It's one small but very important chapter 593 00:33:01,500 --> 00:33:04,800 in our bigger story. 594 00:33:04,800 --> 00:33:06,966 We don't know what happened to that particular group 595 00:33:06,966 --> 00:33:09,066 of Homo sapiens from Grotte Mandrin, 596 00:33:09,066 --> 00:33:10,766 but it's likely that their story 597 00:33:10,766 --> 00:33:13,333 reflects what was unfolding across the continent. 598 00:33:14,400 --> 00:33:16,266 This wave of Homo sapiens 599 00:33:16,266 --> 00:33:19,800 was lured into Europe during a warmer spell. 600 00:33:19,800 --> 00:33:22,066 They were pioneers, for sure, 601 00:33:22,066 --> 00:33:25,433 but they were trying to survive in a brand-new environment 602 00:33:25,433 --> 00:33:29,266 as best as they could, as best as they knew how, really. 603 00:33:29,266 --> 00:33:31,733 Finding temporary places to shelter 604 00:33:31,733 --> 00:33:34,633 before, in the blink of an eye, moving on, 605 00:33:34,633 --> 00:33:37,533 or worse, dying out completely. 606 00:33:37,533 --> 00:33:41,033 Because that band of Homo sapiens from Grotte Mandrin 607 00:33:41,033 --> 00:33:45,300 would be the last of our species found on this continent 608 00:33:45,300 --> 00:33:46,833 for thousands of years. 609 00:33:46,833 --> 00:33:52,300 ♪ ♪ 610 00:33:52,300 --> 00:33:56,466 Perhaps unprepared for the harsh environment they faced, 611 00:33:56,466 --> 00:34:01,366 this early wave of Homo sapiens in Europe did not survive. 612 00:34:01,366 --> 00:34:04,900 Once again, and for thousands of years, 613 00:34:04,900 --> 00:34:09,233 it became exclusively Neanderthal territory. 614 00:34:11,933 --> 00:34:15,400 ♪ ♪ 615 00:34:18,166 --> 00:34:20,233 Neanderthals had survived, 616 00:34:20,233 --> 00:34:23,400 while Homo sapiens died out in Europe. 617 00:34:25,400 --> 00:34:28,433 Yet today, we're the only ones left. 618 00:34:30,166 --> 00:34:33,833 How did our stories end so differently? 619 00:34:36,866 --> 00:34:41,900 ♪ ♪ 620 00:34:47,833 --> 00:34:51,866 Part of the answer lies deep within the forests 621 00:34:51,866 --> 00:34:53,400 of Northern Spain. 622 00:34:57,400 --> 00:35:00,800 (birds chirping) 623 00:35:00,800 --> 00:35:02,466 Where evidence hints 624 00:35:02,466 --> 00:35:06,266 that even without competition from Homo sapiens, 625 00:35:06,266 --> 00:35:09,366 the Neanderthals were failing to cope 626 00:35:09,366 --> 00:35:11,266 with the changing conditions. 627 00:35:15,600 --> 00:35:19,300 A struggle uncovered in a cave known 628 00:35:19,300 --> 00:35:21,966 as the Tunnel of Bones. 629 00:35:21,966 --> 00:35:27,000 ♪ ♪ 630 00:35:32,266 --> 00:35:33,966 Oh, wow. 631 00:35:39,266 --> 00:35:40,933 So, this is the famous El Sidrón Cave. 632 00:35:40,933 --> 00:35:42,600 MARCO DE LA RASILLA VIVES: It is, yes, yes. 633 00:35:47,133 --> 00:35:48,600 AL-SHAMAHI: It's got more character 634 00:35:48,600 --> 00:35:50,533 than I was expecting, actually. (chuckles) DE LA RASILLA: Yeah. 635 00:35:53,300 --> 00:35:58,233 DE LA RASILLA: Here is where we found 2,500 Neanderthal bones. 636 00:35:59,300 --> 00:36:02,233 We found 13 Neanderthal individuals 637 00:36:02,233 --> 00:36:05,000 of different ages and sexes. 638 00:36:05,000 --> 00:36:06,366 (slide projector clicks) 639 00:36:08,933 --> 00:36:12,466 AL-SHAMAHI: Such a, a diverse group in terms of individuals, 640 00:36:12,466 --> 00:36:14,933 all found in one spot. 641 00:36:14,933 --> 00:36:17,966 Genetic studies told us that they are related. 642 00:36:17,966 --> 00:36:20,333 So it's a family group. 643 00:36:21,800 --> 00:36:23,166 We know, for example, 644 00:36:23,166 --> 00:36:26,466 that one female-- we are not completely sure-- 645 00:36:26,466 --> 00:36:29,600 genetic information said 646 00:36:29,600 --> 00:36:31,666 was, uh, uh, red hair. 647 00:36:31,666 --> 00:36:34,300 And you know when you say that one 648 00:36:34,300 --> 00:36:37,600 of those people had red hair, 649 00:36:37,600 --> 00:36:41,466 it, it suddenly brings what were 650 00:36:41,466 --> 00:36:43,766 just fossils, really, to life. 651 00:36:43,766 --> 00:36:49,333 ♪ ♪ 652 00:36:49,333 --> 00:36:52,133 AL-SHAMAHI: It's a cave that's filled with ghosts. 653 00:36:53,533 --> 00:36:57,600 We think these, these people were killed by other group. 654 00:36:57,600 --> 00:37:00,700 ♪ ♪ 655 00:37:02,966 --> 00:37:06,333 AL-SHAMAHI: This was not a natural death. 656 00:37:06,333 --> 00:37:07,733 (slide projector clicks) 657 00:37:07,733 --> 00:37:10,800 Cracked skulls and precise cuts on the bones... 658 00:37:10,800 --> 00:37:12,733 (slide projector clicks) 659 00:37:12,733 --> 00:37:16,500 ...suggest that this was a brutal massacre. 660 00:37:19,100 --> 00:37:23,366 13 people killed by another Neanderthal group. 661 00:37:23,366 --> 00:37:27,933 ♪ ♪ 662 00:37:27,933 --> 00:37:30,533 But closer analysis of their remains... 663 00:37:30,533 --> 00:37:32,066 (slide projector clicks) 664 00:37:32,066 --> 00:37:34,566 ...revealed an even darker truth. 665 00:37:37,300 --> 00:37:39,700 So what do the bones actually tell us? 666 00:37:39,700 --> 00:37:42,533 The first thing the bones tell us 667 00:37:42,533 --> 00:37:46,666 is that this Neanderthal group cannibalized another group. 668 00:37:46,666 --> 00:37:51,000 They were really eating these 13 individuals? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 669 00:37:51,000 --> 00:37:54,466 So how do we know that this was cannibalism, 670 00:37:54,466 --> 00:37:57,133 as opposed to just straight-up murder, 671 00:37:57,133 --> 00:38:00,666 or, for that matter, an animal coming? 672 00:38:00,666 --> 00:38:03,900 Well, because we have seen, on the bones, 673 00:38:03,900 --> 00:38:05,933 what we call "cut marks." 674 00:38:05,933 --> 00:38:09,033 And also, we have found 675 00:38:09,033 --> 00:38:11,033 a lot of bones broken 676 00:38:11,033 --> 00:38:13,100 just to get the marrow. 677 00:38:13,100 --> 00:38:14,300 Yeah-- oh! 678 00:38:14,300 --> 00:38:15,966 So, there are the, both things. 679 00:38:15,966 --> 00:38:18,233 We have cut marks, and then... (exhales) 680 00:38:18,233 --> 00:38:19,833 ...they broke the bones to get the marrow. 681 00:38:19,833 --> 00:38:21,100 Yeah, if you're getting bone marrow, 682 00:38:21,100 --> 00:38:22,500 that, that is... That's, that's... 683 00:38:22,500 --> 00:38:24,400 ...an indication of cannibalism, sure. Yes, yes, sure. 684 00:38:24,400 --> 00:38:29,433 ♪ ♪ 685 00:38:30,600 --> 00:38:32,700 AL-SHAMAHI: This murder-cannibalism 686 00:38:32,700 --> 00:38:35,933 of 13 members of a family group 687 00:38:35,933 --> 00:38:38,600 isn't the only dark thing that's happening here. 688 00:38:40,266 --> 00:38:42,166 DE LA RASILLA: No, we have other informations 689 00:38:42,166 --> 00:38:44,266 in El Sidrón bones. 690 00:38:44,266 --> 00:38:45,900 For example, here. 691 00:38:45,900 --> 00:38:47,666 Uh, bone defects. 692 00:38:48,833 --> 00:38:51,200 We have found that one adult 693 00:38:51,200 --> 00:38:53,300 and one adolescent 694 00:38:53,300 --> 00:38:56,333 retains the baby teeth, in, in this case, the canine. 695 00:38:56,333 --> 00:38:59,233 That's unusual-- that's a congenital anomaly. 696 00:38:59,233 --> 00:39:02,466 DE LA RASILLA: And then the atlas vertebra, there is a, 697 00:39:02,466 --> 00:39:05,866 a hole down there that also is not normal. 698 00:39:05,866 --> 00:39:10,266 And congenital anomalies and defects 699 00:39:10,266 --> 00:39:13,833 that tells us maybe that there are inbreeding 700 00:39:13,833 --> 00:39:17,100 between related persons. 701 00:39:17,100 --> 00:39:22,166 ♪ ♪ 702 00:39:22,166 --> 00:39:25,700 AL-SHAMAHI: So basically, you've got an inbred population. 703 00:39:25,700 --> 00:39:29,666 DE LA RASILLA: Inbreeding and the consequences of that inbreeding, 704 00:39:29,666 --> 00:39:31,233 but different generations, 705 00:39:31,233 --> 00:39:35,233 and this number of anomalies is, is high. (blows through lips) 706 00:39:35,233 --> 00:39:37,133 It's painting a picture, isn't it? 707 00:39:37,133 --> 00:39:39,666 Of those, those final thousands... 708 00:39:39,666 --> 00:39:42,166 Yes. ...thousands of years before they... 709 00:39:42,166 --> 00:39:43,466 Yes. ...eventually became extinct. 710 00:39:43,466 --> 00:39:47,600 I think this is a silent problem. 711 00:39:47,600 --> 00:39:48,666 Silent pathology, you know? 712 00:39:48,666 --> 00:39:49,833 Yeah, it's a silent killer, you're right. 713 00:39:49,833 --> 00:39:53,300 It's, goes, goes, goes down. Yeah. 714 00:39:53,300 --> 00:39:56,300 But it's continuously, next generation, next generation. 715 00:39:56,300 --> 00:39:59,466 Illnesses, you know, all those things. 716 00:39:59,466 --> 00:40:02,200 At the end, Neanderthals are extinct. 717 00:40:02,200 --> 00:40:04,600 ♪ ♪ 718 00:40:06,866 --> 00:40:09,300 AL-SHAMAHI: The El Sidrón bones hint at more 719 00:40:09,300 --> 00:40:11,966 than the suffering of one family. 720 00:40:14,900 --> 00:40:16,266 Because this pattern 721 00:40:16,266 --> 00:40:19,800 of starvation, cannibalism, and violence 722 00:40:19,800 --> 00:40:21,933 was happening across Europe. 723 00:40:23,666 --> 00:40:26,400 This was a species in free fall. 724 00:40:30,033 --> 00:40:31,866 This is a haunting place. 725 00:40:31,866 --> 00:40:34,833 It's not exactly Neanderthals in their heyday, is it? 726 00:40:34,833 --> 00:40:38,400 If anything, it's kind of like the end of days for them. 727 00:40:38,400 --> 00:40:42,233 They've been driven into this evolutionary cul-de-sac, 728 00:40:42,233 --> 00:40:46,400 reduced to eating each other and having children 729 00:40:46,400 --> 00:40:49,366 with their relatives, and that inbreeding 730 00:40:49,366 --> 00:40:52,366 would have made them more susceptible to disease. 731 00:40:52,366 --> 00:40:54,966 If, on the evolutionary timescale, 732 00:40:54,966 --> 00:40:57,300 12:00 midnight represents 733 00:40:57,300 --> 00:40:58,833 extinction for the Neanderthals, 734 00:40:58,833 --> 00:41:02,133 this site is past 11:30. 735 00:41:02,133 --> 00:41:07,633 ♪ ♪ 736 00:41:07,633 --> 00:41:11,700 This once-resilient species 737 00:41:11,700 --> 00:41:15,533 was now reduced to just a few isolated groups... 738 00:41:17,100 --> 00:41:18,900 ...turning on one other. 739 00:41:23,666 --> 00:41:28,000 ♪ ♪ 740 00:41:28,000 --> 00:41:30,766 But any chance Neanderthals may have had 741 00:41:30,766 --> 00:41:32,433 of weathering this storm... 742 00:41:34,200 --> 00:41:38,366 ...was shattered by the return of another species. 743 00:41:40,800 --> 00:41:42,600 Homo sapiens. 744 00:41:46,266 --> 00:41:49,300 Several thousand years after Homo sapiens 745 00:41:49,300 --> 00:41:52,133 had disappeared from Europe, 746 00:41:52,133 --> 00:41:54,633 our species would return. 747 00:41:54,633 --> 00:41:59,366 ♪ ♪ 748 00:41:59,366 --> 00:42:02,866 Waves of new settlers, 749 00:42:02,866 --> 00:42:06,766 finding their way into Europe for the first time. 750 00:42:09,333 --> 00:42:13,500 But even though the climate was as volatile as ever... 751 00:42:15,166 --> 00:42:17,366 ...they were not deterred. 752 00:42:19,500 --> 00:42:21,633 Innovations like weaving 753 00:42:21,633 --> 00:42:24,166 and the ability to make warmer clothing 754 00:42:24,166 --> 00:42:26,400   likely increased infant survival, 755 00:42:26,400 --> 00:42:29,700 even in the harshest months. 756 00:42:30,866 --> 00:42:32,866 Each advance, however small, 757 00:42:32,866 --> 00:42:36,866 added up, giving Homo sapiens 758 00:42:36,866 --> 00:42:40,333 the one thing Neanderthals lacked: 759 00:42:40,333 --> 00:42:44,300 strength in numbers. 760 00:42:45,766 --> 00:42:48,966 ♪ ♪ 761 00:42:53,133 --> 00:42:55,500 The Neanderthals had existed 762 00:42:55,500 --> 00:42:58,566 for around 400,000 years. 763 00:43:00,900 --> 00:43:03,966 Developing a rich culture. 764 00:43:06,333 --> 00:43:08,766 And withstanding brutal conditions. 765 00:43:14,333 --> 00:43:16,933 But the relentless climate, 766 00:43:16,933 --> 00:43:19,733 dwindling resources... 767 00:43:21,400 --> 00:43:24,300 ...and another species growing in strength 768 00:43:24,300 --> 00:43:26,200 all may have pushed 769 00:43:26,200 --> 00:43:29,433 this once-resilient species to the brink. 770 00:43:32,566 --> 00:43:35,400 But what delivered the final blow? 771 00:43:36,700 --> 00:43:40,833 How does an entire species of human disappear 772 00:43:40,833 --> 00:43:43,666 from the face of the Earth? 773 00:43:45,500 --> 00:43:51,133 Part of the answer may lie in the smallest of things: 774 00:43:51,133 --> 00:43:53,066 the genes we exchanged 775 00:43:53,066 --> 00:43:55,966 in the form of our hybrid children. 776 00:43:57,633 --> 00:44:02,733 ♪ ♪ 777 00:44:05,900 --> 00:44:08,366 I'm going to try and do a demo to explain genetics. 778 00:44:08,366 --> 00:44:10,300 So, let's see how this goes. 779 00:44:10,300 --> 00:44:11,966 Let's say that these are the Neanderthals 780 00:44:11,966 --> 00:44:14,166 and these are the Homo sapiens, 781 00:44:14,166 --> 00:44:16,266 and they interbreed. 782 00:44:16,266 --> 00:44:19,133 We don't know where the hybrid children ended up. 783 00:44:19,133 --> 00:44:20,300 Did they end up with the Neanderthals 784 00:44:20,300 --> 00:44:21,466 or did they end up with the Homo sapiens? 785 00:44:21,466 --> 00:44:24,800 So, let's just say they went back 50-50. 786 00:44:24,800 --> 00:44:27,700 And we see a little Homo sapiens DNA 787 00:44:27,700 --> 00:44:29,233 in the Neanderthal group. 788 00:44:31,033 --> 00:44:33,900 And a little Neanderthal DNA in the Homo sapiens group. 789 00:44:35,366 --> 00:44:38,566 The Neanderthals lived in small, isolated populations, 790 00:44:38,566 --> 00:44:41,533 but the Homo sapiens were probably a little bit better 791 00:44:41,533 --> 00:44:43,000 at keeping their kids alive. 792 00:44:43,000 --> 00:44:45,833 And also, importantly, they were constantly 793 00:44:45,833 --> 00:44:48,400 replenishing from source populations 794 00:44:48,400 --> 00:44:50,966 in the Middle East, Africa, and elsewhere. 795 00:44:54,866 --> 00:44:57,300 Numbers made all the difference. 796 00:45:01,000 --> 00:45:04,433   As more Homo sapiens migrated into Europe, 797 00:45:04,433 --> 00:45:07,066 Neanderthals were already declining. 798 00:45:09,966 --> 00:45:11,966 So, when the two interbred, 799 00:45:11,966 --> 00:45:14,966 the impact on Neanderthals was far greater. 800 00:45:18,933 --> 00:45:20,966 If you're a huge population, 801 00:45:20,966 --> 00:45:23,233 that interbreeding doesn't have the same impact as it does 802 00:45:23,233 --> 00:45:26,100 on the much smaller Neanderthal population. 803 00:45:26,100 --> 00:45:28,133 It's already a little bit interbred. 804 00:45:28,133 --> 00:45:30,366 Perhaps they were simply absorbed 805 00:45:30,366 --> 00:45:32,833 into the larger Homo sapiens population 806 00:45:32,833 --> 00:45:35,433 that just kept on replenishing. 807 00:45:35,433 --> 00:45:39,900 Over time, Neanderthal DNA became increasingly diluted 808 00:45:39,900 --> 00:45:44,600 by the much larger Homo sapiens population. 809 00:45:44,600 --> 00:45:46,733 So it doesn't actually need to be 810 00:45:46,733 --> 00:45:48,400 this big act of aggression. 811 00:45:48,400 --> 00:45:50,833 It might just be the fact that we were there, 812 00:45:50,833 --> 00:45:52,366 that we were interbreeding with them, 813 00:45:52,366 --> 00:45:54,666 and that we had large population sizes. 814 00:45:54,666 --> 00:45:57,333 Perhaps that was enough 815 00:45:57,333 --> 00:46:00,133 to push the Neanderthals to extinction. 816 00:46:00,133 --> 00:46:05,166 ♪ ♪ 817 00:46:06,233 --> 00:46:09,433 It was a perfect storm for Neanderthals. 818 00:46:11,300 --> 00:46:13,600 By around 40,000 years ago, 819 00:46:13,600 --> 00:46:15,866 their gene pool was diminishing. 820 00:46:17,300 --> 00:46:19,033 Until only a handful 821 00:46:19,033 --> 00:46:22,166 of distinct Neanderthal populations remained. 822 00:46:25,500 --> 00:46:29,733 Hanging on in just a few isolated enclaves. 823 00:46:32,700 --> 00:46:35,266 We don't know where the last Neanderthal outpost was. 824 00:46:35,266 --> 00:46:38,766 It was likely a very remote part of Europe or Asia. 825 00:46:38,766 --> 00:46:41,700 But around 40,000 years ago, 826 00:46:41,700 --> 00:46:43,433 that place probably acted 827 00:46:43,433 --> 00:46:48,233 as a refuge to the very, very last of their kind. 828 00:46:48,233 --> 00:46:54,033 ♪ ♪ 829 00:46:54,033 --> 00:46:57,133 Archaeologists have pieced together what may be 830 00:46:57,133 --> 00:47:00,300 among the final moments of Neanderthal extinction... 831 00:47:02,133 --> 00:47:04,500 (slide projector clicks) 832 00:47:04,500 --> 00:47:07,033 ...uncovering remains of what could be 833 00:47:07,033 --> 00:47:10,433 the last surviving Neanderthal groups. 834 00:47:10,433 --> 00:47:12,933 (slide projector clicks) 835 00:47:12,933 --> 00:47:15,900 Some of that evidence has been discovered 836 00:47:15,900 --> 00:47:18,966 in coastal caves in Southern Spain. 837 00:47:25,133 --> 00:47:29,066 We don't know what truly happened in those final moments 838 00:47:29,066 --> 00:47:31,566 or who was left at the end. 839 00:47:34,800 --> 00:47:36,333 But there was an ending. 840 00:47:41,800 --> 00:47:45,233 Because after that, Neanderthals, 841 00:47:45,233 --> 00:47:49,533 who had existed for around 400,000 years... 842 00:47:49,533 --> 00:47:54,000 ♪ ♪ 843 00:47:54,000 --> 00:47:56,200 ...vanish from the archaeological record 844 00:47:56,200 --> 00:47:58,500 completely. 845 00:47:59,833 --> 00:48:01,800 Our remarkable abilities 846 00:48:01,800 --> 00:48:04,766 to connect, innovate, and explore 847 00:48:04,766 --> 00:48:08,200 have led to our success. 848 00:48:08,200 --> 00:48:11,200 But time and time again, 849 00:48:11,200 --> 00:48:14,833 that seems to come at the expense of those around us. 850 00:48:16,200 --> 00:48:19,800 Homo sapiens' arrival in Europe triggered 851 00:48:19,800 --> 00:48:24,066 a slow, unwitting war of attrition 852 00:48:24,066 --> 00:48:27,466 against our human cousins 853 00:48:27,466 --> 00:48:30,900 until they simply faded away. 854 00:48:33,266 --> 00:48:35,500 But this wasn't the only ending. 855 00:48:36,566 --> 00:48:40,133 After the last Neanderthals, the Denisovans, 856 00:48:40,133 --> 00:48:43,400 the species who once spanned much of Asia, 857 00:48:43,400 --> 00:48:48,300 may have survived for another 10,000 to 20,000 years 858 00:48:48,300 --> 00:48:52,633 until they, too, were likely overwhelmed by Homo sapiens. 859 00:48:54,233 --> 00:48:55,933 This story starts with three species, 860 00:48:55,933 --> 00:48:57,766 but it ends with one, 861 00:48:57,766 --> 00:49:00,266 and it's part of a wider pattern 862 00:49:00,266 --> 00:49:02,133 that always goes the same way. 863 00:49:02,133 --> 00:49:04,300 The survival of our species 864 00:49:04,300 --> 00:49:07,666 leading to the demise of everyone else. 865 00:49:07,666 --> 00:49:12,700 ♪ ♪ 866 00:49:14,600 --> 00:49:17,966 Today, these events have faded from memory. 867 00:49:23,066 --> 00:49:25,433 But it's not quite the end of the story. 868 00:49:26,666 --> 00:49:30,700 Because we carry a piece of this history within us. 869 00:49:34,466 --> 00:49:36,033 One of the most striking revelations 870 00:49:36,033 --> 00:49:37,400 over the last few years 871 00:49:37,400 --> 00:49:40,633 is that everybody from outside of Sub-Saharan Africa 872 00:49:40,633 --> 00:49:43,466 has about two percent Neanderthal DNA. 873 00:49:46,766 --> 00:49:48,766 And that DNA is associated 874 00:49:48,766 --> 00:49:50,600 with negative things like Crohn's disease. 875 00:49:50,600 --> 00:49:54,166 But it's also associated with all kinds of positives, 876 00:49:54,166 --> 00:49:56,966 like being better adapted to the cold. 877 00:49:59,333 --> 00:50:02,166 And now we know that Denisovan DNA 878 00:50:02,166 --> 00:50:04,800 has been found in Homo sapiens populations. 879 00:50:05,866 --> 00:50:08,900 It could be as high as five percent in the Philippines. 880 00:50:08,900 --> 00:50:10,633 And it's associated with things 881 00:50:10,633 --> 00:50:13,300 like being able to survive better at high altitude. 882 00:50:17,066 --> 00:50:18,566 And if you think about it, 883 00:50:18,566 --> 00:50:22,266 it actually makes perfect sense, 884 00:50:22,266 --> 00:50:24,466 because when we were leaving Africa, 885 00:50:24,466 --> 00:50:26,800 the Neanderthals and the Denisovans 886 00:50:26,800 --> 00:50:30,400 had already spent hundreds of thousands of years 887 00:50:30,400 --> 00:50:34,600 adapting and evolving to their local environments 888 00:50:34,600 --> 00:50:36,366 and pathogens. 889 00:50:36,366 --> 00:50:39,000 And so, what we were doing by interbreeding with them 890 00:50:39,000 --> 00:50:41,566 was effectively a quick fix. 891 00:50:41,566 --> 00:50:44,233 We were adopting adaptations 892 00:50:44,233 --> 00:50:47,000 that would ultimately aid our survival. 893 00:50:50,866 --> 00:50:53,500 No matter where you're from, 894 00:50:53,500 --> 00:50:55,800 it's likely you have traces 895 00:50:55,800 --> 00:50:59,533 of Neanderthal or Denisovan DNA within you. 896 00:51:01,566 --> 00:51:04,033 An echo of the human story 897 00:51:04,033 --> 00:51:08,700 connecting us to this long line of distant ghosts. 898 00:51:10,466 --> 00:51:12,700 Two percent might not sound like a lot, 899 00:51:12,700 --> 00:51:15,066 but my two percent is different from your two percent. 900 00:51:15,066 --> 00:51:18,766 And collectively, all of that Neanderthal DNA 901 00:51:18,766 --> 00:51:22,000 that exists within humans living today 902 00:51:22,000 --> 00:51:24,533 would make up at least half of the Neanderthal genome. 903 00:51:25,733 --> 00:51:28,166 And so, in a very real sense, 904 00:51:28,166 --> 00:51:30,000 Neanderthals and Denisovans 905 00:51:30,000 --> 00:51:32,466 have been assimilated into our bodies. 906 00:51:32,466 --> 00:51:35,600 And it's just the loveliest thought, isn't it? 907 00:51:35,600 --> 00:51:39,133 That they live on and exist within us. 908 00:51:39,133 --> 00:51:43,266 ♪ ♪ 909 00:51:46,500 --> 00:51:50,333 Our planet was once home to many human species. 910 00:51:53,466 --> 00:51:57,633 Bit by bit, they've all disappeared, 911 00:51:57,633 --> 00:52:02,466 leaving only one to carry on their legacy. 912 00:52:28,133 --> 00:52:31,000 ♪ ♪ 913 00:52:31,933 --> 00:52:39,466 ♪ ♪ 914 00:52:43,300 --> 00:52:50,833 ♪ ♪ 915 00:52:54,666 --> 00:53:02,266 ♪ ♪ 916 00:53:03,900 --> 00:53:11,433 ♪ ♪ 917 00:53:13,066 --> 00:53:20,600 ♪ ♪ 67369

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