To: Pharmboy
One is the founding population and the other is maybe the first daughter population. Both populations continue evolving, accumulating mutations. Over time they become more and more different. Because of the early split, this first daughter population doesn't contain the entire catalog of mutations of the founder population. The population with the most unique mutations compared to another population is the most distant from that population.
More recent daughter populations will contain the recent mutations and will not have had enough time to accumulate many unique mutations of it's own. These populations are considered closer in genetic distance.
26 posted on
03/01/2007 4:43:06 PM PST by
Varda
To: Varda
OK--so what you're saying is that the population closest to the original differs the most from it based on mutations occurring since the fission. These suppose different mutation rates of different populations and would then throw out the biogenetic clock.
28 posted on
03/01/2007 5:34:29 PM PST by
Pharmboy
([She turned me into a] Newt! in '08)
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