Originally posted by THE BOUNCER
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you dumbfuck guido. Next time read what i post. After that go re-read again to make sure you get the main idea(s). After that read it again so you know what the fuck i am saying. Than go back and re-read again just to make sure you didn't miss any words.
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bottom line you talk like its easy, you even took a class and yet you dont have a clue. go read some rado threads you stupid shit.Originally posted by dna9488 View Postyou dumbfuck guido. Next time read what i post. After that go re-read again to make sure you get the main idea(s). After that read it again so you know what the fuck i am saying. Than go back and re-read again just to make sure you didn't miss any words.
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I have a clue. I just want to refresh my mind to make sure I don't have errors in my post.Originally posted by THE BOUNCER View Postbottom line you talk like its easy, you even took a class and yet you dont have a clue. go read some rado threads you stupid shit.
Mag is right about skin pigmentation and recessive genes. There more to that than just those two. We have to look at genetic mutations that have occurred and the evolution of mutations that caused a certain specie to survive and produce offspring.
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You're questions says you want to know what makes skin color. I gave you that answer. I gave you a more complex answer than that previously and you said it was too broad. You are all over the fucking place with your question. Let me try it like thisOriginally posted by THE BOUNCER View Postyou never make an attempt. instead you take a question from a question and play dance around the answer.
:fight:
There isn't one specific genetic code for color (each person has their own code). Where ever in history we went from what was to what we are now, it didn't happen with one person. So as evolution/procreation continued the next generation had a similar coding for their skin color which decided what the exact color of this person would be. While there are a lot of similarities, the next generation has a unique code. It's the pieces of that code (recessive/dominant) that is passed to continue and create the way melanin reacts in each person.
Human skin color - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Take a look here at the part about "Skin tone variability". There is a lot of info that I think relates to your question.
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I don't want any confusion here that Magda made an incomplete post about the details through me. What I posted is what I knew and that's it.Originally posted by dna9488 View PostI have a clue. I just want to refresh my mind to make sure I don't have errors in my post.
Mag is right about skin pigmentation and recessive genes. There more to that than just those two. We have to look at genetic mutations that have occurred and the evolution of mutations that caused a certain specie to survive and produce offspring.
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yes fine but i dont think its as simple as that.Originally posted by Shibby View PostYou're questions says you want to know what makes skin color. I gave you that answer. I gave you a more complex answer than that previously and you said it was too broad. You are all over the fucking place with your question. Let me try it like this
There isn't one specific genetic code for color (each person has their own code). Where ever in history we went from what was to what we are now, it didn't happen with one person. So as evolution/procreation continued the next generation had a similar coding for their skin color which decided what the exact color of this person would be. While there are a lot of similarities, the next generation has a unique code. It's the pieces of that code (recessive/dominant) that is passed to continue and create the way melanin reacts in each person.
Human skin color - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Take a look here at the part about "Skin tone variability". There is a lot of info that I think relates to your question.
look at the map in the link you posted.

its not really accurate. there are darker skin tones in the Siberia then what that map shows.
and look at the color of skin in south america. same area on the equator as africa and yet lighter skin color?
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I just had Magda read this and she said if you weren't answering your own question already, I was. I think you have a misconception that everyone is/was/should be a certain color. I assume you know Italians very well right? How many "shades" of Italian do you know. Your line of thinking suggest they should all be the exact same color. Also we don't know that Africa started at the equator. We just know that's where it is now.
If you take the African region you have a basic color, with many variations. You take South America they have a different "base" color. Those current dominant genes trace back too millions of different micro-evolution changes. Maybe a community of darker people communed with lighter people creating the south American color...
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