kristof65 said:
aspqrz said:
...natural spread by random chance...
Except that on Vland, random chance suddenly becomes more likely because of the environmental issues.
Umm. You
do understand what drove evolution on Terra was "environmental issues",
too?
kristof65 said:
Remember that on Earth, we've evolved along with our environment.
And we
haven't on Terra?
kristof65 said:
On Vland, the need to cope with the alien environment is much more likely to induce mutations faster. IF a particular physical trait becomes linked with a successful survival mutation for that environment, that trait is quickly going to become dominant there, regardless of how humans on earth evolved.
Umm.
No.
Why would a pro-survival trait become more common on Vland quicker than it would on Terra?
You seem to be confusing the fact that there will be more mutations because of the higher levels of solar radiation with the speed at which mutations spread.
Remember, for a start, the vast, overwhelming, majority of radiation damage "mutations" = cancer. Of the tiny fraction of a tenth of a percent of those that aren't, most are in junk DNA and have no effect ... the rest, well, overwhelmingly, they are lethal ... the cells don't get fertilised, don't attach to the wall of the womb, or spontaneously miscarry. Of the tiny tiny megatiny fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a percent that aren't immediately lethal in these ways, they more than likely are deleterious and prevent reproduction one way or another, less likely they are neutral, and, most rarely of all, provide a bonus that makes reproduction more likely.
However, given the size of the human genone, the chance of the exact same mutation occurring because of radiation damage more than once is ... very low ... which is why, I would suggest, all modern baseline human blondes are descended from the one precursor mutant.
The rate at which this mutation spread, by pure random chance, as noted, would have required in excess of 650,000 years to reach the current percentages of blondes in society ... but was managed in 11,000 years.
Why? Two possible reasons - blondes tend to have light skin and produce more Vitamin D in sunlight in high latitudes, a definite pro-survival trait on Terra or, equally, they were seen (ghu knows why, exactly) as socially more desirable as mates because, one presumes, of their exotic looks.
The problem with this mutation on Vland is that the hotter sun means that light skin/blonde hair is a *bad* trait as they will be more prone to skin cancer ...
For other mutations, well, the spread of the mutation for lactose tolerance also seems to be very late (4500-4000 BC, either in Arabia and spreading from there or in Scandinavia) and also seems to be from a single point mutation. Spread of this mutation, however, was obviously much more pro-survival, but, still, if you look at the geographic distribution of lactose tolerance, very uneven.
And guess who those high lactose tolerance percent societies are ... the ones who drink a lot of fresh milk ... no fresh milk on Vland, so no lactose tolerance. Vilani adults will be able to consume cheese, but not drink milk ... or, well, the vast majority will.
kristof65 said:
Assuming that most life-forms will begin to experience random mutations in an attempt to survive an alien environment, it seems more likely to me that some wierd things wuold pop up more frequently.
Indeed. Many, many
"some weird things" will pop up ... most will, however, be deleterious. And just because
"some weird things" pop up does
not mean that the
same "weird things" will pop up on Vland that popped up on Terra.
kristof65 said:
There is also the assertation that human hair and skin colors will stay within the current human norms for the Vilani and Zhodani.
Not by me.
I merely asserted that you aren't likely to have blonde Zhos and Vilani because the blonde mutation postdates their isolation from baseline human stock and is sufficiently rare to have occurred only once on Terra in 500,000 years to date.
Are you likely to find blue haired Vilani, well, yes, I forgot about Baboons

silly me ... maybe you
would find blue haired Vilani ... but it would be as likely as finding blonde haired ones ... not very.
Remember, the evidence is that the Vilani suffered an even more nasty "thinning out" than the Daughters of Eve hypothesis (IIRC, the assumption is that our ancestors were thinned down to c. 10,000 individuals worldwide) ... they will actually have even less genetic diversity than humans do ... they may, indeed, have similar problems to Cheetahs in this respect as a result.
kristof65 said:
Obviously, though, these things were never really considered in any depth when the concepts of the Vilani and Zhodani were created. And definitely not with the more in-depth knowledge we have 30+ years later. All that really needs to be done to make them beleivable as they are currently portrayed is a good write up for them explaining why they are the way they are.
Based on our
current understanding of genetics and evolutionary development even if it means ... shock :shock: horror :evil: ... rewriting
Canon to reflect
reality :wink:
Phil