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  • Why The Human Race Is Growing Apart

    WHY THE HUMAN RACE IS GROWING APART

    KarabakhOpen
    >From The Times
    12-12-2007 12:07:32

    Races have evolved away from each other over the past 10,000 years,
    according to new research that challenges standard ideas about the
    biological significance of ethnicity.

    A genetic analysis of human evolution has shown that rather
    than slowing to a standstill it has speeded up, with different
    pressures on different populations pushing racial groups further
    apart. Scientists behind the findings suggest that European, African
    and Asian populations grew genetically more distinct from each other
    over several thousand years, as their environments took them down
    different evolutionary paths.

    This would call into question the popular scientific view that race
    has little or no biological meaning, as the genetic similarities
    between ethnic groups greatly outweigh differences.

    While this remains true - all humans share more than 99 per cent of
    their DNA - the new work indicates that variations tend to differ
    between races, and that these became more, not less, pronounced.

    "Human races are evolving away from each other," said Henry Harpending,
    Professor of Anthropology at the University of Utah, who led the study.

    "Genes are evolving fast in Europe, Asia and Africa, but almost all
    of these are unique to their continent of origin. We are getting less
    alike, not merging into a single, mixed humanity.

    "Our study denies the widely held assumption that modern humans
    appeared 40,000 years ago, have not changed since and that we are
    all pretty much the same. We aren't the same as people even 1,000 or
    2,000 years ago."

    The research is published in the journal Proceedings of the National
    Academy of Sciences. If the trend towards increasing genetic diversity
    were to continue, it could lead ultimately to the development of
    different species.

    Most scientists, however, think this is now highly unlikely.

    The research identified evolutionary currents only in past times. In
    the modern era, greater movement and gene flow between the continents
    has probably slowed or even reversed patterns of increasing genetic
    difference, making the evolution of separate human species virtually
    impossible.

    Armand Leroi, Reader in Evolutionary Biology at Imperial College,
    London, said: "In principle, this could have led to speciation
    if it had continued. In practice, it has got to be the case that
    that cannot happen now. The reason is that this study has looked
    at largely separated populations in the past, but everything about
    human history since the Industrial Revolution weighs overwhelmingly
    against separation and thus against speciation too. Huge increases
    in gene flow are going to wipe this trend out."

    The study shows that over the past 5,000 years, new genetic variants
    have been emerging at a rate 100 times faster than in any other period
    of human evolution.

    If this rate were to have remained the same since humans and
    chimpanzees diverged around six million years ago, the genetic
    difference between the two species would be 160 times greater than
    it is.

    The scientists said this reflected the great increase in human
    populations over that period, which has allowed more beneficial
    mutations to emerge.

    Changes in the human environment, particularly the rise of agriculture,
    also created new selective pressure to which humans adapted.

    Tribes and traits

    -- The research compared genetic information from four modern ethnic
    groups - Japanese, Han Chinese, Yoruba Nigerians and Utah Mormons of
    northern European ancestry

    -- Examples of traits that differ among the groups include the lactase
    gene, which allows people to digest milk into adulthood

    -- Most Europeans have this gene but it is absent in most Africans
    and Asians. This may reflect the ancestral importance of dairy farming
    in Europe

    -- Disease-resistance genes also differ. About 10 per cent of Europeans
    have CCR5, which confers some resistance to HIV, and which may have
    evolved to give resistance to smallpox

    -- Previous research by Professor Harpending has suggested that the
    above-average intelligence found among Ashkenazi Jews could be the
    result of selection in medieval Europe, where they tended to work in
    trade and finance. This, however, has been criticised by scientists.
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