injuries,   which   means   that    Neanderthals    must    have    watched out for one
another,     which,  in  turn,   implies     a   capacity    for     empathy.    From    the
archaeological  record, it’s    inferred    that    Neanderthals    evolved in  Europe
or  in  western Asia    and dispersed   from    there,  stopping    when    they    reached
water   or  some    other   significant obstacle.   (During the last    glaciation, when
sea levels  were    so  much    lower   than    they    are now,    there   was no  English
Channel to  contend with.)  This    is  one of  the most    basic   ways    modern
humans  differ  from    Neanderthals,   and,    in  Pääbo’s view,   it’s    also    one of  the
most     intriguing.     When    modern  humans  journeyed   to  Australia,  even
though  it  was the middle  of  an  ice age,    there   was no  way to  make    the trip
without crossing    open    water.
Archaic humans  like    Homo    erectus “spread like    many    other   mammals
in  the Old World,” Pääbo   told    me. “They   never   came    to  Madagascar, never
to  Australia.  Neither did Neanderthals.   It’s    only    fully   modern  humans  who
start   this    thing   of  venturing   out on  the ocean   where   you don’t   see land.
Part    of  that    is  technology, of  course; you have    to  have    ships   to  do  it. But
there   is  also,   I   like    to  think   or  say,    some    madness there.  You know?   How
many    people  must    have    sailed  out and vanished    on  the Pacific before  you
found   Easter  Island? I   mean,   it’s    ridiculous. And why do  you do  that?   Is  it
for the glory?  For immortality?    For curiosity?  And now we  go  to  Mars.   We
never   stop.”
The same    stretch of  chromosome  5   from    the human,  Neanderthal,    and chimp   genomes.
If   Faustian    restlessness    is  one     of  the     defining    characteristics     of
modern  humans, then,   by  Pääbo’s account,    there   must    be  some    sort    of
Faustian    gene.   Several times,  he  told    me  that    he  thought it  should  be