...As for the natural lifespan of a Neanderthal I would say with certainty that just like the remaining indigenous tribes of today it was much longer than we homo sapiens live for, and more importantly was completely free of the vast variety of diseases and ailments that we suffer from these days so their quality of life would of been a lot better too...
Most estimates I've seen are that their lifespan was around 14-20 years. Some estimates as long as 28-30 years.
To be fair though that's likely not a good indicator of how good their diet was. They simply faced more dangers and didn't have medical care when injured. If they couldn't keep up, they died. They were lower on the food chain then.
They suffered horrendous injuries (as eveidenced by the broken bones found in fossil remains) lived a hand to mouth existance, and died; you really think that was a better quality of life?
Probably true they didn't have the diseases and ailments we have today. They had their own ailments of the day: Anthrax, Rabies, etc.
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