Yes, they were 11% larger than ours. Though there are other explanations for the bigger size of their brains such as the cold-climate/intelligence theory or simple evolution(that is, our body size decreased after that along with the brain-size, and some people claim brain-size/body ratio is more of a sign of intelligence than large brains per se(though that is also disputed).
What is interesting is that the Inuit have the largest skulls,. reportedly, of all humans(though again that isn't necessarily a sign of greater intelligence).
Wow! Why didn't you mention this before, Tyler? This is huge. I found a reference online indicating that the largest craniums were found among the Greenland Inuit, who happened to have the highest intake of animal foods ever measured among living peoples on the planet (99%). So adult Cro Magnons, Neanderthals (
http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/news/chiefeditor/2008/09/neanderthal.html), and Greenland Inuit all had cranial capacities larger than adult Neolithic humans. Do the scientists really expect us to believe that's just coincidence?
Another interesting fact is that Neanderthal skulls are no larger than Neolithic brains at birth--but they grew larger than Neolithic brains by adulthood. I wonder if it was the same with Greenland Inuit? If so, it could suggest an environmental effect (such as diet), rather than a purely genetic one.
Here's the confirming reference I found. Granted, it's a fiction book, but it appears to treat this part as historical:
"The French cranium measurers ran into serious problems in Greenland. They were working from the theory that there was a linear relation between a person's intelligence and the size of his skull. They discovered that the [Inuit] Greenlanders, whom they regarded as a transitional form of ape, had the largest skulls in the world." --Peter Hoeg, Smilla's Sense of Snow, pp. 17-18
Why didn't I ever hear about this in school or from the media? I was taught in college that Caucasians were found to have the largest craniums and brains and that racist scientists used this as proof of mental superiority, but that brain size was really not that important after all. I believed that standard line at the time. Not until decades later do I learn that this was apparently false--that the Inuit actually have the largest craniums. Astonishing, but then again, not surprising.