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why Australian Aborigenes have straight hair
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by MissJennifer: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by AGÜEYBANÁ(Mind718): [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by MissJennifer: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by cassiterides: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by asante: So your saying that black people are not real blacks unless they have curly hair and a wide nose? lol [/qb][/QUOTE]Negroids (Blacks) have wooly hair and wide/flat noses. Afronuts however have a different racial classification regarding who Black people are and they base it [b]solely[/b] on dark pigmentation. The obvious problem with doing this is that you end up clusting non-Negroid races as Negroid (Black). The main reason afronuts do this is because they self-hate Negroid features such as wooly hair and wide noses so it comforts them when they extend their race to include dark skinned non-negroid races who have straighter hair and thin noses. [/qb][/QUOTE]I happen to agree with this. Online, I notice a lot of Black poeple are very hypersenstive when you classify black as being darkskin, wide noses, and kinky hair; [/qb][/QUOTE]It's not so much as noting one phenotype amongst Africans as much as it's trying to hold all Africans throughout Africa to this specific phenotype and only this phenotype which in turn is stereotyping Africans with a "true Negroid" parameter when in actuality it's well known amongst the bio-anthropological community that in Africa, a vast continent where modern humans have lived for 200ky and have accumulated so much phenotypic and genetic diversity there are many different phenotypes that are all indigenous to Africa the Negroid phenotype is just one of many. Note the following for example... [QUOTE]Originally posted by AGÜEYBANÁ(Mind718): [i]The Cambridge researchers studied genetic diversity of human populations around the world and [b]measurements of over 6,000 skulls from across the globe[/b] in academic collections. Their research knocks down one of the last arguments in favour of multiple origins. [b]The new findings show that a loss in genetic diversity the further a population is from Africa is mirrored by a loss in variation in **physical attributes**.[/b] Lead researcher, Dr Andrea Manica from the University's Department of Zoology, explained: [b]"The origin of anatomically modern humans has been the focus of much heated debate. Our genetic research shows the further modern humans have migrated from Africa the more genetic diversity has been lost within a population. [/b] [b] "However, some have used skull data to argue that modern humans originated in multiple spots around the world. We have combined our genetic data with new measurements of a large sample of skulls to show definitively that modern humans originated from a single area in Sub-saharan Africa."[/b] [b]The research team found that genetic diversity decreased in populations the further away from Africa they were - a result of 'bottlenecks' or events that temporarily reduced populations during human migration.[/b] [b]They then studied an exceptionally large sample of human skulls. Taking a set of measurements across all the skulls the team showed that not only was variation highest amongst the sample from south eastern Africa but that it did decrease at the same rate as the genetic data the further the skull was away from Africa.[/b][/i] [/QUOTE][/QB][/QUOTE]The other phenotypes aren't as common though. you all make it seem as if its the majority when its not. the negroid phenotype is the most common one. I haven't see any black africans who have narrow features and fine wavy hair that are not mixed. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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