Computer-assisted Paleoanthropology (CAP)
and the Neanderthals

There is an ongoing vigorous debate about the evolutionary and functional significance of the morphological differences between Neanderthals and modern humans, especially with respect to the question of possible speciation events in the recent evolutionary history of Homo.

Although Neanderthals can generally be distinguished from modern humans by a set of morphological characters, there is a particular need for new quantitative data documenting character variation within and between groups.

In a long-term research project of the Anthropological Institute and the MultiMedia Laboratory aimed at comparative morphometric analysis of Neanderthals and anatomically modern Homo sapiens (AMH), we use CAP in a 3-stage process of investigation:

  1. Establishment of a CT data base of Neanderthal fossils and of a comparative fossil/modern AMH sample;
  2. Computer-assisted preparation virtual reconstruction of the specimens;
  3. Comparative morphometric analysis.

 

 

Computer-assisted paleoanthropology

Comparing Neanderthals and modern humans