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Thursday 26 June 2014

Are some people more Neanderthal than others?

There is belief that some people have a larger percentage of Neanderthal genes than others. This theory is believed to be true. As the average human will have a percentage ranging from 1% to 4% this percentage is mostly due to the origins of where you come from so certain places in Europe will have a larger percentage than say someone in America. There are some specific people who are believed to have more than the 1% to 4% of an average human. These are only speculations and are not factual:

The most famous one is the Russian boxer, Nikolay Valuev, he looks normal in a photograph that shows him from the front, but he has an extremely slanted forehead.

He has a massive skeleton, also. A normal man can't develop such a massive body simply by taking steroids or getting exercise. You have to inherit the prehistoric genetic traits.

Rodney Rhines of Ohio doesn't have a sloping forehead, but he has the protruding mouth of a primitive human. This feature is not noticeable in a front view.
Did he inherit prehistoric genetic traits? If so, that could explain why his behaviour has been crude.
 
Neanderthals and other primitive humans were shorter than modern Northern Europeans, and they had a stronger, more massive body.
Their posture was different, also. They had a short neck that came out of their body at an angle, whereas modern man has a longer neck that is more vertical.

Nikolay Valuev


Rodney Rhines






















 

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