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K'tamanune: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 00:37, May 27, 2019

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There is more information available on this subject at K'tamanune on the English Wikipedia.
K'tamanune
Biological overview

Latin name:

Homo neanderthalensis

Diet:

Omnivorous

Sociocultural information

Homeworld:

Erde-Tyrene

Also known as:

Neanderthals

 
File:Homo neanderthalensis skull.jpg
A fossilised Neanderthal skull.

K'tamanush (singular k'tamanune) were a husky, ocher-skinned species of human native to Erde-Tyrene thousands of years ago.[1] They were known to wander the northern latitudes of the planet and skirt massive grinding sheets of ice. These dwellers in the frigid climates of glacial shadows wrapped themselves in harsh woven fiber and fur. They were one of a number of human species indexed by the Librarian as part of the Conservation Measure and reseeded on Earth after the activation of the Halo Array.

Behind the scenes

Neanderthals were a human species native to Europe and parts of Central and Western Asia on Earth. Physically, Neanderthals differed greatly from Homo sapiens: they possessed slightly larger braincases, smaller foreheads, thicker brow ridges and lacked a chin, as well as having a shorter but much more robust skeleton than their taller, more lithe relatives. Neanderthals appear in the fossil record approximately 130,000 years ago, and disappear in Asia approximately 50,000 years ago before finally disappearing 30,000 years ago. The reasons for their disappearance remain unknown - theories alternately suggest that they were unable to adapt to a changing climate, were displaced by more adaptable modern humans through direct or indirect competition, or were absorbed into the newer human population. Between 1% and 4% of the non-African genepool is Neanderthal DNA, evidence that the two species interbred at some stage, likely in the Middle East as Homo sapiens migrated out of Africa. Eventually Neanderthals would mate with Homo sapiens and Denisovans. Many modern-day humans are genetically related to both species.[2] After several tens of thousands of years' coexistence with Homo sapiens, the Neanderthal species would eventually go extinct to due several factors.

List of appearances

Sources

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