Understanding the argument -
Anthropologist: It was formerly believed that prehistoric Homo sapiens ancestors of contemporary humans interbred with Neanderthals, but DNA testing of a Neanderthal’s remains indicates that this is not the case. - Conclusion "The prehistoric Homo sapiens and Neanderthals did not interbred."
The DNA of contemporary humans is significantly different from that of the Neanderthal. - Fact
Which one of the following is an assumption required by the anthropologist’s argument?
(A) At least some Neanderthals lived at the same time and in the same places as prehistoric Homo sapiens ancestors of contemporary humans. - Strengthener but not an assumption. Negation says they did not live in the same time and place, but they still could have interbred. It's about genetics and not about time and location.
(B) DNA testing of remains is significantly less reliable than DNA testing of samples from living species. - reliability is out of scope.
(C) The DNA of prehistoric Homo sapiens ancestors of contemporary humans was not significantly more similar to that of Neanderthals than is the DNA of contemporary humans. - negation means they were similar, meaning they interbred. The current differences can be caused by other factors, such as mutations.
(D) Neanderthals and prehistoric Homo sapiens ancestors of contemporary humans were completely isolated from each other geographically. - Weakener, at best, though the argument is about genetics, and they could still have interbred, and is not about location.
(E) Any similarity in the DNA of two species must be the result of interbreeding. - The anthropologist's argument does not depend on this claim. Similar DNA could result from common ancestry or other evolutionary factors, not just interbreeding. This assumption is not required for the argument to hold.