HUMAN VARIATION AND RACE


1) High levels of solar radiation negatively impact our survival and disturb homeostasis because overexposure is so possible and so common. We as humans benefit by sin exposure, but it is easy to get too much sun and do extensive skin damage, in a number of cases irreversible.
2) Short term adaptation: One example would be human beings wearing sunglasses to protect their eyes, or sunscreen to protect their skin, limiting exposure.
Facultative adaptation: An example here would be changes in skin tone as a result of prolonged exposure. I am specifically referring to getting tanned or sunburned as a result of exposure. Developmental Adaptations: In humans, prolonged exposure could result in chromosomal changes. Melanin levels are increased over time as a result. Cultural Adaptation: One example here could be humans choosing to cover their bodies when they are aware that prolonged exposure could be harmful to them.
3) Studying human variation in this way can help with understanding people from different cultures. It is always easier to accept people from different walk of life if we know how it is they came to be the way they are. For instance, if we were to meet someone with skin color different then ours we might assume we know certain things about them. They may appear to be from one culture or race and that may not be the case at all. For example, we may meet someone from Africa who dresses in heavy clothing from head to toe in the hot sun, and think that appears crazy. When in reality they are attempting to protect themselves from harmful exposure. If we did not try to get that information we might assume all sorts of crazy things that have no basis in reality, but are culturally a necessity for that individual.
4) In regard to race as it relates to high levels of solar radiation, according to skincancer.org the annual incidence rate of melanoma is 1 per 100,000 in blacks, 4 per 100,000 in Hispanics, and 25 per 100,000 in non-Hispanic whites. We could take this to mean that African Americans have made an genetic adaptation to all of the exposure, and do not get skin cancer as easily. That is just one interpretation. However, the numbers are not so skewed to suggest this is the case across the board. Environmental impact on cultures is more reliable than race as an explanation for these changes because the environment you live in plays a much bigger part in who you are-even if on the surface racial stereotypes appear to fit. More often than not it is the environment causing the behavior, not because an individual is part of a particular race and therefore programmed a particular way.
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