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Have you ever read The Future is Wild? It has the hypothetical last mammalian descendant evolving to be ever tastier to a species of arachnids which, for all intents and purposes, farm it.
Humans driving the evolution isn't special. Plenty of animals are in competition with each other, and plenty others are seeking the most finely tuned symbiotic relationship. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Remember the game! P.s.: Feldspar.
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Dogs (and cats... and various other pets.) It has been determined that a lot of the breeds will be incapable of surviving without humans to give them food and such, and apparently they love us for it! They look hideous anyway. Teehee.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Badlands 128 Minimap Colors I like
Platform 95 Minimap Colors Install 85 Minimap Colors What is this table, you ask? Ashworld 92 Minimap Colors I made images that list all the Jungle 105 Minimap Colors tiles' minimap colors arranged Desert 109 Minimap Colors by tileset groups (i.e. tileset Ice 94 Minimap Colors index.) Twilight 97 Minimap Colors I could make my own SCPM... |
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The real one.
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Most people don't understand some rather fundamental concepts for how DNA functions. Sure most people know it unzips and that there are two halves that replicate one another. Less might know how the basic mechanisms for how this works. (With DNA polymerase moving along the chains of sugar phosphates and connecting corresponding amino acids.) Fewer still realize how often this process fails to do its job.
Every second of every day, our genes are changing, on rather massive scales. If you think about it, there are so many different things in our environment that have effects on molecular structures. Many of the chemicals we eat/breathe/drink/absorb through the skin/ect. have the ability to migrate through cells pretty readily, and can alter the structure. Even things you wouldn't necessarily think of being important. (Did you know that any plastic bottle you drink out of leaves a plastic residue inside your body, and most forms of this plastic have biological effects similar to the hormone estrogen?) Heck even the sun shines radiation on us that has effects on our DNA structures. (One of many reasons why our cells on the outer layer of skin are dead.) The fact is is that our DNA is mutating all the time. Most of the time the mutations are rather unimportant, as much of our DNA is useless junk. Every once and a while though, the cell mutations have a result. For instance, while a cells DNA mutates into something that can reproduce quicker than the rest of your body, (generally considered an evolutionary advantage) our bodies attack this anomaly, and it develops into a tumor. (The reason it remains a tumor is that the cells can reproduce faster than we can kill them.) (As another side note: we use many more chemicals that can enter our nuclear membrane now then we have in the past, which is why cancer was generally nonexistent in ancient history.) Now as for human driven evolution. I consider it to be one of the greatest tools that we will ever have a chance to use. Although what I consider to be an evolutionary alteration is generally not what most people think of. When most think of evolution, they think massive population trends and ecology. THIS IS NOT WHAT MOST HUMAN ALTERED EVOLUTION ACCOMPLISHES. Although granted there tend to be scientific leakages creating altered populations among wildlife. Most genetically altered specimens are only that, a single entity. And most genetic alteration is much simpler than most people think. They typically think of altering somethings genetics as replacing chunks of DNA with some other code, and then letting this new creature grow to maturity. Most genetic alterations, though occur in things that are already grown and living. My point, human engineered evolution has been mainly portrayed by the side effects that businesses have latched on to. (Genetically engineer crops ect.) Most of our genetic engineering has done some great things. Yet most people don't consider it genetic engineering, even though it has no other name to go by. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Neanderthals were separate species, new study finds
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080505/sc_afp/scienceanthropologyneanderthals ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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I don't think they mean an ancestor. The study says that we're different species, rather than the Neanderthal being our cousins in the evolutionary tree by having descended from an earlier homo sapien variant/common primate ancestor of the same species.
So modern humans are 'homo-sapien-sapiens,' and Neanderthals were thought to be within 'homo-sapien-____' but now they're taken out of the homo sapien category. But it'd be somewhat weird if some of us have Neanderthal genes in us...? ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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No, they were never within homo sapiens. And that's what "different species" means. Although there is a significant following that homo sapiens and homo neanderthalensis interbred to form homo sapiens sapiens, there's no evidence. It's a pitty they went extinct, they were better than us in every way (Except running ability...). We just thought up agriculture first, and oppressed our women. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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The real one.
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Vocal capability you mean... We could speak consonants they couldn't.
And your quip about agriculture made me think of this. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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No proof of that. All we can say is that they had some speaking ability, due to their hyoid bones. (Have I ever told any of you that the hyoid is my favourite bone) Ah ok. As for Neanderthals, I doubt they were smarter than us? @Rantent, yeh I read that from somewhere as well. Their vocal cords weren't as developed... They had a smaller body size, and a larger cranium, so probably. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |