The better sense of smell claim does not mean that early modern humans were "more advanced/evolved" than Neanderthals, in fact it proves the exact opposite. You see, other primates have been shown to have a far better sense of smell than modern humans, yet were substantially less "evolved" in the brain than early modern humans, thus indicating that, as hominid brains grew, the sense of smell got reduced:-
http://news.sciencemag.org/2003/02/why-monkeys-smell-better-peoplethus indicating that the Neanderthals, with their lesser sense of smell, were more advanced than early modern humans. The idea being that, instead of investing resources into a sense that was no longer needed, the Neanderthals instead used resources to build a better, more complex brain than early modern humans.
Hmm, one thing I overlooked:- I have noticed that my own sense of smell is lessened in effectiveness when in really cold environments. Since Neanderthals mostly lived in glacially-cold areas, perhaps they needed their sense of smell a lot less?
I am still very leery of this notion that just looking at a skull can determine the size of a particular part of the brain, but then I am no palaeoarchaeologist. I mean, as an example, someone who is blind from birth is highly likely, to have the visual cortex of his/her brain devoted to the other 4 senses or some other function of the brain, rather than sticking to vision which cannot even be used. I doubt that the shape of the skull would change to reflect such a change in the brain. Similiarly, if a caveman had been afflicted with anosmia like his entire tribe, I doubt that looking at his skull would reveal this.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/09/080908-neanderthal-brain.htmlThe above article shows that Neanderthals had a later sexual maturity than humans, thus disproving your claim re teeth. This makes sense if one assumes that Neanderthals were more intelligent than early modern humans since they needed further development of the brain.
The average weight cited by you is not necessarily correct as the number of Neanderthal fossils is pretty low. Here is a website giving a much lower figure for Neanderthal average weight of 65kg for males and 54kg for females:-
http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-neanderthalensisAlso, of course, the brain-size to body mass ratio, does have some inherent flaws in it. For example,crows and ravens seem more intelligent than their tiny ratio allows.
The claim you made re the teeth is actually highly controversial and heavily disputed:-
http://news.sciencemag.org/paleontology/2010/11/neandertal-children-developed-fast-trackBut, he adds, although it now seems that Neanderthal teeth grew faster, the "jury is still out" on whether they actually reached adulthood faster than H. sapiens.
Part of the problem is that there are no definitive studies showing whether children whose teeth erupt early also reach puberty and adulthood faster than those whose teeth erupt later, says neurobiologist Christoph Zollikofer of the University of Zurich in Switzerland. And more data are needed to show the precise magnitude of the difference in growth rate between Neandertals and us, says ASU paleoanthropologist Jay Kelley.
So, teeth evidence is not really good enough.
Also, one researcher has shown that there is evidence to suggest that there was an extra growth spurt in the Neanderthal face, which presumably affected the teeth, so evidence of teeth is not necessarily a sign that humans had a longer adolescent phase :-
http://fau.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fau%3A2989/datastream/OBJ/viewThe author above is of the view that Neanderthals and early modern humans had the same adolescent phases in terms of duration.
This article below claims that Neanderthals had roughly similiar durations as regards brain-growth as early modern humans. That is, Neanderthals and early modern humans started out with the same size brain, on average, at birth, but the Neanderthal brain would then grow at a much faster rate for the same duration as early modern humans' brains, until in the end Neanderthal brains ended up larger than early modern humans' brains.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080908203013.htmThis article does suggest a more likely explanation for Neanderthals not being as good at surviving as early modern humans. It is pointed out that Neanderthal women had their first child later as a result of having to cope with larger brains. Given the harsh climates as well, as a factor, a simple explanation is that while Neanderthals were smarter than early modern humans, they had fewer children than the latter, and so were outbred by them over time:-
The large brain brought consequences for the life history (pregnancy, puberty, life expectancy) of the Neanderthals. For children to develop a large brain in a short space of time, they need additional energy and nutrition from the mothers. The only mothers capable of providing this were those who had developed the necessary constitution themselves. They therefore had their first child a little later. If one now compares the entire life history of an average Neanderthal with that of a modern human being, a picture emerges which deviates significantly from existing doctrine: the development of the Neanderthals was just as slow as that of modern people, if not even a little slower.
taken from:-
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080908203013.htmThis, of course, is the more likely explanation since the interest in interbreeding suggests similiar levels of intelligence:-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2062696/Neanderthals-clever-interbred-impressed-humans-say-experts.html