Dragoonster
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2008
- Messages
- 1,754
How would differences in height have been selected for, or was that due to diet or baby diet or something?
Folate, I believe. The selective pressure is fairly strong for light skin at high latitudes (avoid vitamin D deficiency) and dark skin at low (avoid neural tube defects in fetuses,) so it happens quickly. As was mentioned earlier, the genetic variation was probably already present in the population. It's fairly clear that Africa is where humanity came from just based on the variety of genetic material there as compared to the rest of the world, not to mention fossil records, etc.
How would differences in height have been selected for, or was that due to diet or baby diet or something?
im no biologist, but I do know that the eye color, hair color, hair texture, and skin color, make up a miniscule amount of our genetic blue-print. let alone the fact that humans, no matter where they come from, can all interbreed.
we are all one species..and our racial differences are purely skin deep.
though, this does lead me to this question:
how long would human groups have to be separated to become separate species?
Gawdzilla said:This requires we ignore the spectrum of characteristics with other "races" and the overlap between "races" that show that "race" is, at the end of the day, just a social fiction and not a biological reality.
kedo1981 said:Yes the idea of race is a concept belonging in the dustbin of time.
Science and only science has proven the truth of that.
Let WOO WOOs say we have no wonder in our “souls” but what more exhilarating a notion than all people are one race(and to prove it).
I have trouble understanding what people mean when they say that "race" is not biologically based, or not a scientific concept, or similar things[....]
Clearly, there are clusters of inherited characteristics among human beings that result in easily visible, consistent differences, when similar people mate. If dissimilar people mate, the characteristics are mixed and matched, so of course it's all very fluid.
im no biologist, but I do know that the eye color, hair color, hair texture, and skin color, make up a miniscule amount of our genetic blue-print. let alone the fact that humans, no matter where they come from, can all interbreed.
we are all one species..and our racial differences are purely skin deep.
though, this does lead me to this question:
how long would human groups have to be separated to become separate species?
Yes, there are clusters of inherited characteristics and science doesn't deny that. What science has observed though is that there are multiple clusters of inherited characteristics and they overlap in many ways. The problem isn't that race can't be definied scientifically, the problem is that there are many ways to define race and no objective means for saying which one is "the right one".
Did you misread my post? I didn't say that human races can't be identified. I said the opposite. Human races can be identified and in multiple ways.I believe Pup is making a valid observation. There is a bit of "political correctness" in play here.
Olive producing trees are all one species but we have no trouble talking about mission olives, kalamata olives, manzanilla olives, etc. (there are dozens). They have distinct characteristics and are quite easily identified. I cannot imagine that olives cannot be identified scientifically any more or less than human races (or if you prefer -- varieties) can be identified. Put a garden variety Swede next to a native Australian: How much trouble would you really have defining the differences?
there is nothing "feel good; warm and fuzzy" about it, science proved there is no meaningful
concept of race.
Did you misread my post? I didn't say that human races can't be identified. I said the opposite. Human races can be identified and in multiple ways.
I think sub-species is the lowest taxonomic level. We are mostly of the species 'homo sapien', aren't we? Which could then be divided into sub-species?
So, I guess by 'race' people mean 'sub-species'?
wait...so Homo sapiens could breed with all the other Homos?
like Homo aferensis and Homo neanderthalensis?
I'd like to echo what Athon said above, and also point out that a great deal of the variation may have already been present: ie. new mutations may not have been necessary (or at least, not very many) to create the apparent differences.
Instead, variation that was already present might simply have been selected on. That is, for instance, certain genes could have been selected out rather than new ones selected in. Get rid of a melanin producing gene, for instance, and you've got whiter skin without needing new variation to arise through mutation. The mutations could have taken place in the past. That's what's great about a large, diverse gene pool and sexual reproduction: you've got access to a great deal of variation for selection to act on when conditions change took quickly for new mutations to arise.
I think it likely that both selection on old variation and new variation arising through mutation likely had a part to play.
But, as Athon said, the differences between the races are really very small, so it's not surprising that it could arise in a short period of time.