29 THE RESTLESS APESOME
r ser; meanuck requiredmore food to sustain.” In otors t o survivesuccessfully for a housand years suddenly became an insuperable handicap.
Above all t is almost never addressed is t Neandertals ly larger ters for Neandertals versus 1.4 formodern people, according to one calculation. t for alt. I believe I speak trut nowion is suc made.
So out and adaptable andcerebrally muced)ans pers of an alternativetiregional ion inuous—t just as australopito ime us is, on t a separate speciesbut just a transitional p usforebears in C European us, and so on.
“Except t for me tus,” says t’s a term s usefulness. For me, us is simply an earlier part of us. I believe onlyone species of Africa, and t species ishomo sapiens.”
Opponents of tiregional t it, in t instance, on t itrequires an improbable amount of parallel evolution by t distant islands of Indonesia, iregionalism encourages a racist vie antook a very longtime to rid itself of. In t named Carleton Coon of ty of Pennsylvania suggested t some modern races sources oforigin, implying t some of us come from more superior stock tably to earlier beliefs t some modern races suche African “Bushmen”
(properly tralian Aborigines ive thers.
ever Coon may personally , tion for many people someraces are inly more advanced, and t some ially constitutedifferent species. tinctively offensive noable places until fairly recent times. I ime-Life Publications in 1961 called ticles in Lifemagazine. In it