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Egyptian art and Etruscan art: dark skinned man/light skinned women
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by zarahan- aka Enrique Cardova: [QB] Posted by ANglo-idiot: [b]Black females are not lighter or different to black males in craniofacial terms. [/b] Stupid muthafuuck. You have already been debunked on this. ALL females are lighter than males, even if not readily apparent to the naked eye due to blood flow in the skin. ANd in studies of crania men and women do show differences, and these differences can be detected with a battery of modern measurements, as already shown in previous threads where your idiocy was destroyed- example [i] (Proceedings of the ninth International Congress of Egyptologists: : Volume 1. p 2017. Jean Claude Goyon, Christine Cardin - 2007)[/i] Now adjourn your bogus, inadequate wanker ass. ---------------------------------------------------- [i]"If this common selective force were sexual selection, it could have lightened European skin color by acting on an existing sexual dimorphism. Men and women differ in complexion because of differing amounts of melanin and cutaneous blood flow; in short, women are fairer, men browner and ruddier (Edwards & Duntley, 1939; Frost, 1988; Frost, 2005; Hulse, 1967; Jablonski & Chaplin, 2000). The size of this sex difference is still debated, largely because most studies are poorly controlled for age (girls lighten only after puberty and immediately before are actually darker than boys). Investigators also try to exclude tanning by measuring under the arm, where there is less subcutaneous fat and probably less dimorphism in skin color, given that the lightness of a woman’s skin correlates with the thickness of her subcutaneous fat (Mazess, 1967). In any event, sexual selection may have targeted this sex difference, as suggested by a cross-cultural male preference for lighter complexioned women and, conversely, by some evidence of a female preference for darker complexioned men (Aoki, 2002; Feinman Feinman & Gill, 1978; Frost, 1988; Frost, 1994b; Frost, 2005; Van den Berghe & Frost, 1986)."[/i] FROM: Frost Peter, 2006. European hair and eye color, evidence of sexual selection? Evolution and Human Behavior 27 (2006) 85–103 and: [i]"A different perspective on sexual dimorphism in skin pigmentation comes from the recognition that human females require significantly higher amounts of calcium during pregnancy and lactation and, thus, must have lighter skin than males in the same environment in order to maximize their cutaneous vitamin D3 production (Jablonski and Chaplin 2000)... Thus strong clinical evidence continues to support the hypothesis that lighter skin pigmentation in females evolved primarily as a means to enhance the the potential for cutaneous vitamin D production and maintain healthy long-term calcium status and skeletal health."[/i] -- Human Evolutionary Biology. 2010. By Michael P. Muehlenbein [IMG]http://rapmodels.net/photos/Sasha-Shelton-leaning-against-a-red-wall-showing-off-her-booty-in-black-and-white-lingerie.jpg[/IMG] Maximizing her cutaneous vitamin D3 production even as you read... Women are naturally lighter than men due to differing amounts of melanin and cutaneous blood flow.. even in dark-skinned populations.. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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