Parkas might have helped Neanderthals avoid extinction, university study
VANCOUVER — Neanderthals may have been doomed to extinction because they didn’t make fur parkas or tailor their clothing to fit the frigid climate, says a new study from an expert at Simon Fraser University.
Prof. Mark Collard, a paleoanthropologist and director of the Vancouver-area school’s human evolutionary studies program, said the study started with a question he had been mulling for 16 years about why evidence of wolverines was found in early human sites and not where Neanderthals lived.
He and some graduate students pored over a database of numerous archeological sites that dated back 60,000 years at the University of Cambridge. He said they were looking for big patterns, similar to crime-scene investigations.
“You’re building up explanations from lots of little bits of evidence.”


