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East Asian Physical Traits Linked to 35,000-Year-Old Mutation
NY Times ^ | February 14, 2013 | NICHOLAS WADE

Posted on 02/15/2013 1:33:40 AM PST by Pharmboy

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To: Pharmboy

Hunter gathering societies were/are pretty much content to feed themselves on a day to day, it’s the people that wanted more that developed agriculture.

Assume you have a village and the village is divide into six groups of equal numbers to hunt and gather food.

Every day the 6 groups go out and every day the 6 groups return each with some food, but 2 of the groups return every day with more food than the other 4 groups combined. Everyone gets an equal share.

When times are good there may not be a real problem, but when times are hard the 2 more productive groups will say
“we can provide enough food for ourselves but we can’t provide for the other 4 that don’t produce as much”.

The 2 more productive groups can stay and starve with the others or they can leave and feed themselves.

The 2 groups that leave will take with them the superior skills that made them more productive and pass these superior skills along.

Some in the 4 groups that are left might survive, but they do not have superior skills to pass along so their society stays stagnant.

The same thing is repeated over and over again, the more productive leave as a means of survival because they cannot survive and also provide for the non or if you prefer the less productive. When they leave their superior skills go with them.

Finally one day someone had the bright idea “instead of searching all over hells half acre for this plant that gives me seeds to eat everyday, I will gather extra seed and not eat them instead I will plant some of these seeds in one place so I know where they are” and bingo we had agriculture.


41 posted on 02/15/2013 12:00:16 PM PST by IMR 4350
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To: IMR 4350
Whatever comes into your mind is OK? Just make stuff up, and that does it for you? OK...I get it: you're not a scientist, but c'mon, man!

Here, read this. It varies, but many H-G societies DO store food.

42 posted on 02/15/2013 3:39:22 PM PST by Pharmboy (Democrats lie because they must.)
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To: RadiationRomeo

Not sure about the incisors, but Native Americans are descended from Siberians.


43 posted on 02/15/2013 6:28:24 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: Pharmboy

Many doesn’t mean ALL. Don’t you know that, or is that above your level. It really doesn’t take a scientist to know that.

Some H-G in Africa after 100,000 years still don’t store any significant amount of food, what do you think people did before they left Africa for other parts?


44 posted on 02/15/2013 6:51:36 PM PST by IMR 4350
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To: Pharmboy; martin_fierro; blam

 GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach
Thanks Pharmboy.
Africans and Europeans carry the standard version of the gene, but in most East Asians, one of the DNA units has mutated.
IOW, it wasn't a mutation, it was a boys-meet-girls story.

Just adding to the catalog, not sending a general distribution.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.


45 posted on 02/15/2013 6:56:52 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: AdmSmith; agrace; AnalogReigns; Cacique; caryatid; Celtjew Libertarian; CobaltBlue; ...
Genetic
Genealogy
>> PING <<
Send FReepmail if you want on/off GGP list
Marty = Paternal Haplogroup O(2?)(M175)
Maternal Haplogroup H
GG LINKS:
African Ancestry
DNAPrint Genomics
FamilyTree DNA
GeneTree
Int'l Society of Genetic Genealogy
mitosearch
Nat'l Geographic Genographic Project
Oxford Ancestors
RelativeGenetics
Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation
Trace Genetics
ybase
ysearch
The List of Ping Lists

Smaller breasts ... than whose?

46 posted on 02/15/2013 8:43:41 PM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: soycd

You Funny


47 posted on 02/16/2013 12:47:32 AM PST by Psiman
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To: abclily
If man first evolved in Africa, why aren’t Africans away ahead of the rest of us in intelligence and accomplishments?

Considering that civilization DID first emerge out of Africa (in ancient Egypt) as well as the Middle East (the "fertile crescent" of what is now Israel, Syria, Iraq, & Iran) which is right next to Africa...I don't see your point.

Yes, Africa in modern times--that is the last 400 years--has been a basket case. There has never been an one political entity controlling all, or even most of, Africa--as it's topography, including the world's biggest desert and some of the world's biggest rain forrests--doesn't exactly make unification easy, or even possible. The Meditaranian region, Europe, China--and the fertile crescent, are much more amenable for travel--and military/political control...i.e. empires, the topography which of course which has hosted many such empires...and civilization....and development, unlike much of the rest of the world, excepting of course, North America.

48 posted on 02/17/2013 9:36:47 PM PST by AnalogReigns (because the real world is not digital...)
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