
Neanderthals were not ‘hypercarnivores' and feasted on maggots, scientists say
The theory from US researchers undermines previous thinking that Neanderthals were 'hypercarnivores' who stood at the top of the food chain with cave lions, sabre-toothed tigers and other beasts that consumed impressive quantities of meat.
Rather than feasting on endless mammoth steaks, they stored their kills for months, the scientists believe, favouring the fatty parts over lean meat, and the maggots that riddled the putrefying carcasses.
'Neanderthals were not hypercarnivores, their diet was different,' said John Speth, professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Michigan. 'It's likely maggots were a major food.'
Neanderthals were thought to be top of the food chain because of the high levels of heavy nitrogen in their bones. Nitrogen builds up in living organisms when they metabolise protein in their food. A lighter form of the element, nitrogen-14, is excreted more readily than the heavier form, nitrogen-15. As a result, heavy nitrogen builds up in organisms with each step up the food chain, from plants to herbivores to carnivores.
While the levels of heavy nitrogen in Neanderthal bones place them at the top of the food chain, they would not have been able to handle the amount of meat needed to reach those levels, the researchers say.
'Humans can only tolerate up to about 4 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight, whereas animals like lions can tolerate anywhere from two to four times that much protein safely,' said Speth.
Since many Indigenous groups around the world routinely consume maggots in putrefied meat, the researchers decided to explore their potential role. The experiments were not for the squeamish.
Dr Melanie Beasley, a member of the team at Purdue University in Indiana, was formerly at the Forensic Anthropology Center, or Body Farm, at the University of Tennessee. There, researchers study donated human corpses that are left to decompose. The work helps forensic scientists hone their techniques, for example, to ascertain for how long people have been dead.
Beasley measured heavy nitrogen in putrefying muscle and the maggots that infested the corpses. Heavy nitrogen rose slightly as muscle putrefied, but was far higher in the maggots. The same process would have occurred in carcasses the Neanderthals stored, Beasley said.
The finding, reported in Science Advances, suggests that rather than consuming meat as ravenously as lions and other hypercarnivores, Neanderthals acquired high levels of heavy nitrogen by eating maggots, which themselves were enriched with heavy nitrogen.
'The only reason this is surprising is that it contradicts what we westerners think of as food,' said Karen Hardy, professor of prehistoric archaeology at the University of Glasgow. 'Elsewhere in the world, a very wide range of things are eaten, and maggots are a great source of protein, fat and essential amino acids.'
'It is a no brainer for Neanderthals,' she added. 'Put out a bit of meat, leave it for a few days then go back and harvest your maggots, its a very easy way to get good nutritious food.'
'How does it shift our thinking? The Neanderthals as top carnivores was nonsense, it was physiologically impossible. So this makes sense, but also explains these high nitrogen signals in a way that nothing else has done so clearly,' Hardy said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
20 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Scientists reveal four everyday signs that indicate you are a psychopath
What makes a psychopath? In a quest to determine whether it comes down to nature or nurture, a team of neurologists in China has discovered that certain brains are hardwired to show psychopathic behaviors, including aggression and rule-breaking. The first-of-its kind study examined how the brain's structure connects psychopathy, a diagnosable psychological disorder, with real-world actions. After analyzing the brain scans of more than 80 people who reported having certain psychopathic traits, though not officially diagnosed as psychopaths, researchers found those with stronger tendencies toward aggression, impulsivity, and lack of empathy, showed distinct structural brain connectivity compared to individuals with milder traits. Those traits common in psychopaths were in turn associated with behaviors including substance abuse and violence. The research suggests that the brains of people with these qualities are wired differently, with some pathways supercharged while others are weakened, potentially leading to harmful or disturbing behaviors. Roughly one percent of Americans have been diagnosed psychopaths, equating to about 3.3million people. Not all people who have psychopathic traits are true psychopaths, though. These characteristics exist on a spectrum on which people show symptoms to varying degrees without being clinically diagnosed or becoming violent. Typically, research into psychopathy studies how different brain regions communicate with each other. But the Chinese researchers focused on structural connectivity; the nerve fibers that link different regions, the integrity of fiber bundles, and weaker or thicker white matter pathways. Rather than focusing on how different parts of the brain fail to communicate, structural connectivity examines why they fail. Researchers relied on 82 people's brain scans. The people were sourced from the Leipzig Mind-Body Database, a repository of neuroimaging data collected from adults in Leipzig, Germany. They documented each person's psychopathic traits using the Short Dark Triad Test, a questionnaire consisting of 27 questions that capture people's narcissism, manipulative tendencies, and psychopathic traits, such as a lack of empathy. People had to rate themselves on a five-point scale from strongly disagree (one) to strongly agree (five). Higher scores indicated more psychopathic traits. Then, researchers assessed people's behaviors using the Adult Self-Report. Researchers administered the Dark Triad test, which captures people's narcissism, manipulative tendencies, and psychopathic traits, such as a lack of empathy. People with so-called 'dark triad personality traits' share similar facial features and expressions It evaluates a range of emotional and behavioral actions, specifically measuring aggressive, rule-breaking, and intrusive behaviors such as unwanted personal questions or overstepping physical boundaries. A higher score indicated more severe external behaviors. Scientists used each person's MRI data to map out how different brain areas are physically connected. The study identified two key brain connections tied to impulsive and antisocial behaviors in people who possessed psychopathic traits based on their questionnaire answers. 'Psychopathic traits were primarily associated with increased structural connectivity within frontal (five edges) and parietal (two edges) regions,' the researchers said. In the positive network, in which brain connections are strengthened as psychopathic traits increase, stronger connections were clustered in brain regions governing decision-making, emotion, and attention. These included pathways that link emotion and impulse control, which may explain blunted fear and reduced empathy in psychopaths. It also included the area involved in social behavior, which could cause a psychopath to understand emotion but not feel it. And connection correlated with more impulsive actions. In the negative network, in which connections weaken with stronger psychopathic traits, researchers saw weak links in the regions critical for self-control and focus, translating to psychopaths' tendency to hyper focus on their self-serving goals while ignoring how their actions affect others. Researchers also found unusual connections between areas used for language and understanding words. Given that psychopaths are adept at manipulation, this could indicate neural wiring optimized for strategic, controlling communication rather than genuine communication. The team also found a strong connection between brain regions responsible for reward-seeking behavior and areas for decision making, which could explain why psychopaths often chase immediate gratification, even when it harms others. Dr Jaleel Mohammed, a psychiatrist in the UK, said: 'Psychopaths do not care about other people's feelings. In fact if you ever approach a psychopath to tell them about how you're feeling about a situation, a psychopath will make it very clear that they could not care less. 'They literally have a million things that they would rather do than listen to how you feel about a situation.'


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Medicare and Medicaid turn 60 – and face historic cuts decades in the making
The US's largest public health insurance programs, Medicare and Medicaid, turn 60 years old on Wednesday – a birthday that will be celebrated only weeks after Republicans enacted the largest cuts to healthcare in the nation's history. Passed in the civil rights era, the sister health insurance programs served as tools for the Democratic president Lyndon Johnson to desegregate American healthcare and fight poverty. 'This is an infamous day for the US, which already has the most abysmal healthcare system among our peer nations,' said Lawrence Gostin, a professor of global health law at Georgetown Law. 'Now, in order to give tax relief and spend more on defense, we're kicking off our most needy citizens from life-saving care.' In a health system defined by a patchwork of public and private coverage, Medicare and Medicaid have stood for 60 years as the civil rights era's health legacy – their history more often marked by expansion than contraction, even amid decades of attacks from conservatives. That history took a sharp right turn on the Fourth of July, when Donald Trump signed a Republican budget law that will cut $1tn from Medicaid beginning in 2026. 'It's really unconscionable these cuts,' said David Lipschutz, co-director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, speaking about both programs. 'The magnitude, the scope, the targeting of certain lawfully present immigrants, the added requirements and burdens for people with Medicaid – specifically designed to purge the roles of people who would otherwise be eligible.' Today, Medicare insures more than 68 million seniors, and Medicaid insures 71 million low-income, elderly and disabled adults. Cuts signed by Trump are expected to result in nearly 12 million people losing Medicaid coverage and another 5 million people losing health insurance because of a reduction in government subsidies to private insurance, through so-called 'Obamacare' plans. The cuts are the largest in the program's history, and enact decades of conservative rhetoric – tracing all the way back to then-actor Ronald Reagan's 1961 criticism of public health insurance as 'socialized medicine'. Medicare and Medicaid were enacted together on 30 July 1965 – born with Johnson's signature on the Social Security Amendments of 1965, or HR 6675. The programs represented both an enormous victory and, in a way, a concession. A group of campaigners for universal health coverage tried and failed to pass a 'national health insurance' after the second world war – in large part because of the antagonism of American doctors – around the same time that the United Kingdom's National Health Service was getting off the ground. Unable to achieve universal coverage, proponents settled for an 'add-on' to social security, the retirement benefit for older Americans, according to Pulitzer prize-winning author Paul Starr, whose book, The Social Transformation of American Medicine, is the authoritative history. 'Medicaid was a footnote,' said Starr. 'The whole focus was on passing Medicare.' Medicare also sought to correct a searing injustice in American healthcare – Jim Crow segregation that extended to America's doctor's office and hospitals. In 1946, congressional lawmakers modernized the nation's healthcare facilities with the Hill-Burton Act, but did so with a 'separate but equal' philosophy. For nearly two decades, Hill-Burton helped construct or modernize 6,800 facilities in 4,000 communities, often excluding Black patients and physicians. 'Typical practice in the south would be to see all the white patients first, and see the Black patients last,' said Starr. 'Hospitals were segregated and Black people did not have access to mainstream hospital care in many places.' A 1963 supreme court case against a North Carolina hospital found that the 'separate but equal' doctrine was unconstitutional. In a few short years, hospitals and clinics across the country desegregated to participate in Medicare. Less recognized at the time was the power of Medicaid, and how its structure – jointly operated by the states and federal government – would make it more vulnerable to political attacks. 'Medicaid gradually grew to being the system of health insurance for low-income people, for people with disabilities. It became the method of financing nursing homes in the US,' said Starr. Medicare and Medicaid led, 'not only to desegregating, but elevating life expectancy across the states and reducing disparities among racial and ethnic minorities, women, children and older adults and people with disabilities,' said Daniel Dawes, an expert on global health policy at Meharry Medical College. Beginning in the Reagan era in the 1980s, conservatives proposed transforming Medicaid from an 'entitlement', which does not cap costs, to a limited 'block grant' to states – necessarily capping how many people and what services would be covered. The former House speaker Newt Gingrich, George W Bush's administration and the former House speaker Paul Ryan, all Republicans, made proposals to block-grant Medicaid. Decades of rhetoric pushing to cut Medicaid carried into talking points about the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Trump's signature spending bill. Trump officials rolled out vintage Republican arguments to describe Medicaid beneficiaries as caught in 'a lifelong trap of dependency'. A wide array of evidence shows most Medicaid beneficiaries who can work already do, and new requirements instead function as red tape to limit enrollment. Polls show that Medicaid is widely popular, even among Republicans. The Obama administration led a historic expansion of Medicaid in 2010, through the Affordable Care Act (ACA), better known as Obamacare. For the first time, Medicaid would cover working-age single adults – not just pregnant women or families, as the program had traditionally done. In 2025, a major economic study again showed its benefits: expanding Medicaid to millions more Americans probably saved more than 27,000 lives. The improvement in Americans' health was perhaps only matched by the ferocity of attacks from the political right. For nearly a decade, the repeal of Obamacare became a cornerstone of Republican politics. Trump himself has only sporadically engaged in the healthcare debate. In 2017, he would tell the press: 'Nobody knew that healthcare could be so complicated.' Before he was elected again in 2024, he said he had 'concepts of a plan' to replace Obamacare, and promised not to touch Medicaid, Medicare or social security. Trump first attempted to repeal Obamacare in 2017, a change that would have left an estimated 15 million people without insurance. The bill was memorably tanked with a thumbs-down from the Republican senator John McCain. However, ideas about how to cut Medicaid did not sink with the bill. In 2018, the Trump administration approved the first Medicaid work requirements as pilots in Arkansas and Georgia. Courts struck down those pilots, but they now form a critical part of how the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is expected to push people off the program. Starr described the cuts to Medicaid as out of step with reality. 'A lot of people do work at the minimum wage, millions of people, and they're still poor,' he said. 'And by the way those minimum-wage jobs won't provide them any healthcare – so you're just going to let them die when they get sick? What are you going to do?' The enormous cuts to Medicaid have set off new wrangling within the Republican party, including efforts by the Missouri Republican senator Josh Hawley to repeal the cuts for which he just voted. Republicans could face further backlash when cuts to Medicaid start to hit rural hospitals around 2026. A June analysis by the University of North Carolina's Sheps Center for Health Services Research found that 338 rural hospitals, including dozens in states such as Louisiana, Kentucky and Oklahoma, could close as a result of the spending bill. There are nearly 1,800 rural hospitals nationally, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), a healthcare research non-profit. 'While we've tried to chip away at Medicaid for many, many decades this is the first time Congress has really gutted the program,' said Gostin. 'People will die, a lot of people will die. A lot of people will get very, very sick, have preventable illnesses, and so to me this is just simply historic and unconscionable.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Men born in these months are more likely to suffer from crippling mental health condition which kills millions
Men born in the summer are more likely to be depressed, according to a new study. Researchers from Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Canada wanted to investigate whether the season of birth influences the likelihood of experiencing depression and anxiety symptoms in adulthood. They looked at a sample of 303 people—106 men and 197 women—with an average age of 26. The respondents were recruited from universities across Vancouver, and came from a 'global population'. The study authors revealed that they were mostly of South Asian (31.7 per cent), White (24.4 per cent), and Filipino (15.2 per cent) descent. They were asked to fill in PHQ-9 (for depression) and GAD-7 (for anxiety) assessments, which allowed the researchers to filter out the people who met the medical criteria for the common mental health issues. Furthermore, the participants' birth month was categorised by its respective season: spring (March, April, May), summer (June, July, August), autumn (September, October, November) and winter (December, January, February). It was noted that mental health conditions were common among participants, with 84 per cent and 66 per cent of participants experiencing symptoms of depression and anxiety, respectively. Upon crunching the numbers, the researchers concluded that there are no strong seasonal trends linked to anxiety, but there is a seasonal influence on depression risk. They found 78 males born in the summer could be classed as minimally depressed, mildly depressed, moderately depressed, moderately severely depressed and severely depressed on the PHQ-9 scale. This compared to 67 born in winter, 58 born in spring, and 68 born in the autumn. There are limitations to the research, and not only because it used a small sample of people from a similar demographic (young adults studying at university). The authors also noted that not everyone in the sample correctly completed the required PHQ-9 questions, meaning only 271 people's depression and anxiety statuses were assessed. Lead author Arshdeep Kaur concluded: 'The research highlights the need for further investigation into sex-specific biological mechanisms that may connect early developmental conditions (like light exposure, temperature, or maternal health during pregnancy) with later mental health outcomes.' The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that between 700,000 and 800,000 people die by suicide every year—a cause of death closely linked to instances of depression. Depression is also linked to substance abuse, alcoholism and poor lifestyle choices—such as eating unhealthy foods—which can lead to killer conditions such as Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and cancer. Last year it was reported that experts had discovered six distinct types of anxiety and depression. A mix of the two conditions is estimated to be Britain's most common mental health problem, affecting about eight per cent of the population, with a similar rate in the US. However many people with the conditions are forced to cycle through different treatments, which include psychotherapy and medication, in the hope of finding one that works. The researchers collected data from a sample of 1,051 patients with depression and anxiety, 850 of which weren't currently being treated. Patients had brain scans done while they were both at rest and when asked to conduct an emotional task such responding to photos of sad people. Experts, from the University of Sydney and Stanford University in California, then compared these results between the patients as well as healthy controls to spot any differences. The aim was to find if different parts of the brain 'lit up' between patients, showing that sections of the organ were behaving differently among some participants. They also assessed each participant's symptoms of depression and anxiety, such as insomnia or feelings of suicide, to also identify any common signs between patients with similar brain scan results. The end result was that scientists were able to group patients together and break down depression and anxiety into six different subtypes. WHAT IS DEPRESSION? While it is normal to feel down from time to time, people with depression may feel persistently unhappy for weeks or months on end. Depression can affect anyone at any age and is fairly common - approximately one in ten people are likely to experience it at some point in their life. Depression is a genuine health condition which people cannot just ignore or 'snap out of it'. Symptoms and effects vary, but can include constantly feeling upset or hopeless, or losing interest in things you used to enjoy. It can also cause physical symptoms such as problems sleeping, tiredness, having a low appetite or sex drive, and even feeling physical pain. In extreme cases it can lead to suicidal thoughts. Traumatic events can trigger it, and people with a family history may be more at risk. It is important to see a doctor if you think you or someone you know has depression, as it can be managed with lifestyle changes, therapy or medication.