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Reason: None provided.

Yeah, im mostly european, but somehow part of the 1-3% of british people with dry ear wax, real humdinger there.

https://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/science/japanese-scientists-identify-ear-wax-gene.html

Earwax comes in two types, wet and dry. The wet form predominates in Africa and Europe, where 97 percent or more of the people have it, and the dry form among East Asians, while populations of Southern and Central Asia are roughly half and half. By comparing the DNA of Japanese with each type, the researchers were able to identify the gene that controls which type a person has, they report in the Monday issue of Nature Genetics.

Anyway, I definetly feel more neanderthal than the average person.

I had all my wisdom teeth fully in by the time I was 21, I have enough space for another set of molars back there.

Emotions are something ive struggled with my entire life, I just feel to much and I definitely wonder if that is a part of the neandethal race lmao.

But I was thinking, arent homosapiens immune systems basically inherited versions of the neanderthal immune system?

So we all have some in us, just more than others.

https://www.mpg.de/9819763/neanderthal-genes-immune-system

When modern humans met Neanderthals in Europe and the two species began interbreeding many thousands of years ago, the exchange left humans with gene variations that have increased the ability of those who carry them to ward off infection. This inheritance from Neanderthals may have also left some people more prone to allergies. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and the Institut Pasteur and the CNRS in Paris, France, report about the discoveries in two independent studies, adding to evidence for an important role for interspecies relations in human evolution and specifically in the evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line of defense against infection.

If the interglacial ends, and its 80,000 years of snowball earth, what do you think the human race might look like after living in caves again for so long.

Perhaps we are what came out of the caves at the start of the last interglacial.

:Shrugs:

45 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yeah, im mostly european, but somehow part of the 1-3% of british people with dry ear wax, real humdinger there.

https://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/science/japanese-scientists-identify-ear-wax-gene.html

Earwax comes in two types, wet and dry. The wet form predominates in Africa and Europe, where 97 percent or more of the people have it, and the dry form among East Asians, while populations of Southern and Central Asia are roughly half and half. By comparing the DNA of Japanese with each type, the researchers were able to identify the gene that controls which type a person has, they report in the Monday issue of Nature Genetics.

Anyway, I definetly feel more neanderthal than the average person.

I had all my wisdom teeth fully in by the time I was 21, I have enough space for another set of molars back there.

Emotions are something ive struggled with my entire life, I just feel to much and I definitely wonder if that is a part of the neandethal race lmao.

But I was thinking, arent homosapiens immune systems basically inherited versions of the neanderthal immune system?

So we all have some in us, just more than others.

https://www.mpg.de/9819763/neanderthal-genes-immune-system

When modern humans met Neanderthals in Europe and the two species began interbreeding many thousands of years ago, the exchange left humans with gene variations that have increased the ability of those who carry them to ward off infection. This inheritance from Neanderthals may have also left some people more prone to allergies. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and the Institut Pasteur and the CNRS in Paris, France, report about the discoveries in two independent studies, adding to evidence for an important role for interspecies relations in human evolution and specifically in the evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line of defense against infection.

45 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Yeah, im mostly european, but somehow part of the 1% of british people with dry ear wax, real humdinger there.

Anyway, I definetly feel more neanderthal than the average person.

I had all my wisdom teeth fully in by the time I was 21, I have enough space for another set of molars back there.

Emotions are something ive struggled with my entire life, I just feel to much and I definitely wonder if that is a part of the neandethal race lmao.

But I was thinking, arent homosapiens immune systems basically inherited versions of the neanderthal immune system?

So we all have some in us, just more than others.

https://www.mpg.de/9819763/neanderthal-genes-immune-system

When modern humans met Neanderthals in Europe and the two species began interbreeding many thousands of years ago, the exchange left humans with gene variations that have increased the ability of those who carry them to ward off infection. This inheritance from Neanderthals may have also left some people more prone to allergies. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and the Institut Pasteur and the CNRS in Paris, France, report about the discoveries in two independent studies, adding to evidence for an important role for interspecies relations in human evolution and specifically in the evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line of defense against infection.

45 days ago
1 score