Study shines a light on what happened on Easter Island slashgear.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from slashgear.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Neanderthal ear scans support idea they could hear us and had a type of human language
Lindsay Clark Tue 2 Mar 2021 // 13:15 UTC Share
Copy
Computerised tomography scans and auditory bioengineering models of fossilised Neanderthals ears suggest our closest extinct cousins had a hearing range necessary to process human speech.
The virtual reconstructions based on previously published fossil specimens by researchers at the Universidad de Alcalá, Madrid, Spain and Binghampton University in New York, US, have shown that the occupied bandwidth of Neanderthal hearing was in the same range as that of modern-day humans, and also greater than that of earlier hominin samples recovered in Sima de los Huesos, the pit of bones in the Atapuerca Mountains, northern Spain.
Inside Lacrosse Photo Alex McIntyre)
Team 91 MD Fire goalie Cardin Stoller defends the cage at IL s inaugural Elite Eight. Stoller, a Rutgers commit, is the son of Felice Stoller, a guess on this week s podcast.
As February is American Heart Month and the return to play for scholastic teams across the country triggers the purchasing of new equipment, Felice Stoller, Dr. Roger Blumenthal and Marc Pion join IL s Terry Foy to discuss the new NOCSAE standard for shoulder pads and chest protectors that went into effect Jan. 1, 2021, and reduces the risk of a potentially fatal injury called Commotio Cordis.
Commotio Cordis: Important Issues for the Lacrosse Community