Larger people have less surface area to body mass, not more.
Yes that's true. I forgot while writing my post that the "insides" also needed to be heated, and not just the layer of skin(surface). But that still means that 1) Smaller individuals have less body mass that needs heating and 2) they need less calories to maintain a correct body temperature.
At least that's what I believe to be the reason why they are more resistant to cold. Maybe TylerDurden can answer this in a more detailed/better way.
Obviously Orientals are only better adapted to the cold, but not as much as in palaeo times. Fur is not needed if the body has much warmer blood circulating, with extra layers of fat around the belly and so on.
The Neanderthals were even better adapted to the cold than Homo Sapiens, so certainly never needed any fur. There was some scientific stuff about the shape of their noses etc. which explained partly why they were so much better adapted:-
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12203812
The study you posted states nowhere that Neanderthals really did not wear clothes. It actually claims, as I did, that Neanderthals could not have a thick enough layer of fat, unlike some aquatic mammals such as seals, to protect themselves efficiently against cold. If, as a terrestrial mammal, they did have a thick enough layer of fat, then they would actually be "obese". And if they where obese they would certainly have trouble foraging food and hunting down animals.
Yes they acquired noses that where more adapted to cold climates, as well as blue eyes and straight hair, but that's probably because they would not protect their face with clothing. I usually don't wear anything on my head, even during wintertime. I doubt they would, be it a mammoth skin balaclava. Since this part of their body was in constant contact with the surrounding environment, it may be one of the only things, along with light skin, that partly "adapted" to cold climates.
Having warm blood circulating in your body doesn't have such a great influence on your levels of resistance against colder climates. Every mammal has warm blood flowing inside them. They still need fur or fat to keep warm. Unless that animal originates from a region or zone where -heavy- protection against cold is quite unnecessary. Furless animals come in that category, with animals such as Egyptian cats, elephants, hippos and…humans.
Talking about pachyderms, why do you think mammoths had fur, but not their Southern cousin the elephant?
Finally, we both agree that Neanderthals had a bigger brain than Sapiens. Don’t you think they would be smart enough to find a way to store the most energy they could by, for example, keeping their bodily heat from otherwise dissipating into the surrounding air by wearing handcrafted clothes made out of animal skin? Sapiens certainly was bright enough to do so.
Who knows, maybe that’s why Neanderthal disappeared
. To dumb to wear clothes when it's cold outside.