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Denamic t1_iv1bds6 wrote

If their skull did not fit through the mother's pelis, it would not live at all. This was some time before we invented surgery.

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EazyPeazySleazyWeezy t1_iv23svz wrote

There's ample evidence of Neanderthals with various severe, yet healed, injuries, including severed limbs. Suggesting they at least had enough medical knowledge to mend wounds/severed limbs and possibly even amputate.

It's not a large leap to think they would have had enough intuition to use a knife to cut out a baby if a mother died in child birth.

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za419 t1_iv2s8sj wrote

Ehhh... Doubtful. C-sections weren't all that successful, even for the child, until fairly recently in the scope of human history.

Given that there'd be a very strong evolutionary pressure against needing a risky procedure to live, and you'd need it to be consistent, it's doubtful that that'd survive very long.

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OG_ninnyhammer t1_iv27xj1 wrote

Amateur here. Is there evidence Neanderthal skulls were smaller at birth? In adulthood, their brain cases were 100ccm+ bigger than ours, on average.

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