❓ A disappearance that still intrigues us
Neanderthals disappeared from Europe, including France, around 40,000 years ago.
Since their discovery in the 19th century, this disappearance has raised a major question:
How could such a well-adapted species vanish?
Today, scientists agree on one essential point:
👉 Neanderthals did not disappear suddenly.
🧬 Neanderthals were not inferior

Comparison between a Neanderthal skull (left) and a modern human skull (right).
Contrary to earlier beliefs, Neanderthals:
- made complex tools (Mousterian culture),
- controlled fire,
- hunted efficiently,
- buried their dead,
- had strong social organization.
In France, archaeological sites such as La Ferrassie (Dordogne) and La Chapelle-aux-Saints (Corrèze) show that they survived for hundreds of thousands of years in extreme climates.
Their disappearance cannot be explained by simple physical or intellectual inferiority.
🌍 Hypothesis 1: Climate change
Around –40,000 years ago, Europe experienced significant climate fluctuations.
These changes led to:
- transformations of landscapes (forests giving way to steppe),
- the disappearance of certain animal species,
- increased pressure on food resources.
Neanderthals, highly specialized in close-range hunting in forest environments, may have struggled to adapt to open plains compared to Homo sapiens.
🧍♂️🧍♀️ Hypothesis 2: Competition with Homo sapiens
At the same time, Homo sapiens (Cro-Magnon) arrived in France.
These humans had:
- broader social networks (long-distance exchanges),
- faster technological innovation (spear-throwers, needles),
- more advanced symbolic communication (art, ornaments).
Even without direct conflict, competition for territory and game may have gradually reduced Neanderthal populations.
🧬 Hypothesis 3: Interaction and interbreeding
Genetic discoveries (Nobel Prize awarded to Svante Pääbo in 2022) revealed a key fact:
👉 Modern humans (outside sub-Saharan Africa) carry 1–3% Neanderthal DNA.
This means:
- Neanderthals and Homo sapiens met,
- they had common descendants,
- Neanderthals did not fully disappear, but were genetically absorbed into larger sapiens populations.
🧠 Key takeaways
- The disappearance was multifactorial: climate, demographics, and interbreeding
- Neanderthals still live on within us through our DNA
- In France, the site of Saint-Césaire yielded one of the last known Neanderthal skeletons (around –36,000 years)
📸 Image credits
- Skull comparison — DrMikeBaxter, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
- Neanderthal man (Chapter 2) — Jakub Hałun, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
📚 Sources
- Svante Pääbo – Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes
- CNRS – Neanderthals: a gradual disappearance
- National Museum of Natural History – Neanderthal dossier
- INRAP – The last Neanderthals in France