Neanderthals belong to species neanderthalensis.
No. They are separate species of humans.
"The Neanderthal Man" is a 1953 British film directed by Ewald André Dupont.
Both.
The best evidence we have is that they were a separate species of man and that we are all descended from Cro-magnon. But we all also have 7% Neanderthal genes. They didn't like each other very much, and no doubt had wars.
Neanderthal man was first discovered in the Neander Valley (German: Neanderthal) near Düsseldorf, Germany in 1856, which is where the name "Neanderthal" comes from. Subsequent findings of Neanderthal fossils have been found in various locations in Europe and Asia.
No. They are separate species of humans.
Wise Man or Neanderthal Man
"The Neanderthal Man" is a 1953 British film directed by Ewald André Dupont.
Within the genus homo there are several species. The exact number of these is debated but some include: * Homo sapiens sapiens (Our own species, anatomically modern humans) * Homo sapiens * Homo neanderthalis (commonly known as Neanderthal man and sometimes considered to be Homo sapiens neanderthalis) * Homo erectus * Homo habilis
Both.
The best evidence we have is that they were a separate species of man and that we are all descended from Cro-magnon. But we all also have 7% Neanderthal genes. They didn't like each other very much, and no doubt had wars.
Neanderthal man was first discovered in the Neander Valley (German: Neanderthal) near Düsseldorf, Germany in 1856, which is where the name "Neanderthal" comes from. Subsequent findings of Neanderthal fossils have been found in various locations in Europe and Asia.
Australian aborigines, like all modern human populations, belong to the Homo sapiens sapiens species. Neanderthals were a separate species of hominins that went extinct around 40,000 years ago.
neanderthal
Humans are the species Homo sapiens, from the Latin for "thinking (or wise) man".
There is some evidence to suggest that Neanderthal man and Cro-magnon man were contemporaries. There no evidence to suggest that any co-species exists today.That does not mean it is impossible, merely highly unlikely
Paleolithic.