Food & Drink1 min ago
In The Beginning
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Theory tells us that the human race started in a small area of Africa,if this is so where would each human find a partner to procreate with? Would we in fact be mating with brothers & sisters ? If not then where do the extra people come from ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Evolution progresses by gene mutation in a single specimen - then the specimen mates with non-mutated but the dominant mutated gene recurs in the offspring, and so the new population grows, and if it has an advantageous feature it survives at the expense of the original unmutated one, or can co-exist alongside it.
Also it's typical for subsets of a population to diverge a little from the rest of the population if they become isolated -- the basic point being that there is less room for genetic variation in a smaller group, so that any differences tend to be accentuated rather than "smeared out".
Then there's the fact that if that subset is living somewhere different then there are different evolutionary pressures -- for example people in the far north have no especial reason for high levels of melanin in their skin as opposed to those living in equatorial regions.
But anyway. The answer to the OP is basically "incest -- incest everywhere".
Then there's the fact that if that subset is living somewhere different then there are different evolutionary pressures -- for example people in the far north have no especial reason for high levels of melanin in their skin as opposed to those living in equatorial regions.
But anyway. The answer to the OP is basically "incest -- incest everywhere".
I never really know why people ask questions which can be easily researched rather than relying on speculation and opinions of the general public, on a forum.
http:// science line.uc sb.edu/ getkey. php?key =1138
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For example I think it's cheetahs that are supposed to have dropped to a population numbering in the hundreds at least twice in their past -- they only recovered in number through massive amounts of familial inbreeding, leading to a very low genetic variation. This isn't unknown in other species either.
That's a bit more tricky Ron, but it's surely possible that while the eye change itself did not confer advantage but as that feature proliferated, somewhere in the descendant population a further unidentified one did. Incidentally all this is highly speculative on my part, I'm not an expert in genetics.