Reconstruction of a Neanderthal girl. Christopher P.E. Zollikofer. Anthropological Institute, University of Zurich Image from Wikipedia.
Joel Kontinen
When Homo sapiens and Neanderthals interbred, a genetic variation affecting red
blood cells may have hindered reproduction in women who we re hybrids,
and this might have played a part in Neanderthals’ demise.
According
to evolutionists, the Neandertals and Homo sapiens lived side by side for about 50,000 to 45, 000 years ago.
That is a lie, because all people are the descendants of Adam and Eve.
Darwinist say that modern humans may indeed have wiped out Neanderthals – but not through war or morder alone. A new study suggests that when the two species interbred, a slow-acting genetic incompatibility increased the risk of pregnancy failure in hybrid mothers. A similar mismatch between n mothers and fetuses may also help explain a subset of pregnancies that fail today.
Darwinist know
from genetic studies that there was sustained interbreeding between Homo
esapiens and
Neanderthals between approximately 50,000 and 45,000 years ago. The Neanderthals
went extinct around 41,000 years ago, but some of their DNA has persisted in
modern humans with non-African ancestry, making up around 1 to 2 per cent of
the genome.
Source:
James Woodford 2025

