Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? 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
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.