Submitted by nodeciapalabras t3_ylu0ir in askscience
Denamic t1_iv1bds6 wrote
Reply to comment by passwordsarehard_3 in Why don't we have Neandertal mitochondrial DNA? by nodeciapalabras
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.
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.
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.
[deleted] t1_iv29r7m wrote
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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.
[deleted] t1_iv1pfnh wrote
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