Iguana, you are dead wrong re this. There is scientific data showing that we are partly descended from Neanderthals who were well adapted to living in Ice-Age Europe well before the advent of fire. And, there is increasing evidence to suggest we are descended from all sorts of other apemen, not just those which came from the tropics.
Perhaps I’m dead wrong, but it’s generally admitted that we descend much more (if not totally) from Cro-Magnons (Sapiens) than Neanderthals.
According to this article and others,
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/03/110314152917.htm Neanderthals mastered the fire and
“(…) there is evidence that contemporary humans carry a small amount of Neanderthal DNA. Modern humans began migrating out of Africa to Europe some 40,000 years ago.” How much DNA ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neanderthal#Genome Perhaps 1 to 4%, and it’s not even sure why.
Which species of non-tropical “apemen” are you talking about? You mean the Neanderthals were not descending from African hominids, Australopithecus and such, but were instead an entirely separate branch originated from unknown cold climate hominids and apes?
Sure, Neanderthals were better adapted to cold climate than Sapiens, but still it seems Neanderthals were wearing furs and using the fire most of the time. If they were perfectly adapted they wouldn’t need either. Saying they were perfectly adapted is like pretending that we are adapted to cooked food because we can reproduce and thrive on it.
No, I think it would be better to admit that the Neanderthals could live in Europe mostly because they used technology, even if
“Neanderthal predecessors pushed into Europe's colder northern latitudes more than 800,000 years ago without the habitual control of fire, said Roebroecks”Personally, I can never understand this absurd love of warmth that some people have. I mean, warmer holidays with "sun, sea, sex and sand" tend to be overwhelmingly boring, often involving drunkenness and vomiting(such as in the Costa Del Sol, for example), or mindless, passive sunbathing, doing nothing, while one's skin slowly turns darker and more cancerous due to the sun's rays. And, in the summer, the water is usually as warm as bathwater, which is very unpleasant. That's why I far prefer swimming in the Northern Mediterranean in May or September, not so much in July/August.
For me, the ultimate weather is to wander out in the lovely and cold snow wearing just a t-shirt and jeans, and some trainers if the snow is not too deep. I have been told that Iceland has an average annual temperature of 15 degrees Celsius - if only I could get a job there instead!
That is your personal fondness! But, again, would you be able to live in such places without a heated shelter and clothes?
For me, tropical sun and seas means swimming, snorkeling, and windsurfing without wetsuit, biking, walking bare feet on a river bed up to a waterfall in the jungle, working in the garden, reading, drinking young coconuts, eating seafood, jackfruits, durians and mangoes, living nude or almost even at night, contemplating the sky full of stars…
Anyways, thanks for the interesting discussion. I’m ready to change my stance on this matter if you can prove me you’re right and I’m wrong!