When we think of
human evolution, our minds wander back to the thousands of years it took
natural selection to produce the modern-day man. But are we still changing as a
species, even today? New research suggests that, despite modern technology and
industrialization, humans continue to evolve. “It is a common misunderstanding that
evolution took place a long time ago, and that to understand ourselves we must
look back to the hunter-gatherer days of humans,” says Dr. Virpi Lummaa from
the University of Sheffield’s department of animal and plant sciences.
But not only are we
still evolving, we’re doing so even faster than before. In the last 10,000
years, the pace of our evolution has sped up 100 times, creating more mutations
in our genes, and more natural selections from those mutations. Here are some
clues that show humans are continuing to evolve.
1. We Drink Milk
Historically, the
gene that regulated a human’s ability to digest lactose shut down as they were
weaned off of their mother’s breast milk. But when we began domesticating cows,
sheep and goats, being able to drink milk became a nutritionally advantageous
quality, and people with the genetic mutation that allowed them to digest
lactose were better able to propagate their genes. A 2006 study suggests
this tolerance for lactose was still developing as early as 3,000 years ago in
East Africa. That genetic mutation for digesting milk is now carried by more
than 95 percent of Northern European descendants.
2. We’re Losing Our
Wisdom Teeth
Our ancestors had
much bigger jaws than we do, which helped them chew a tough diet of roots, nuts
and leaves. And what meat they ate they tore apart with their teeth, all of
which led to worn down chompers that needed replacing. Enter the wisdom teeth:
A third set of molars is believed to be the evolutionary answer to accomodate
our ancestors’ eating habits. Today, we have
utensils to cut our food. Our meals are softer and easier to chew, and our jaws
are much smaller as a result, which is why wisdom teeth are often impacted when
they come in — there just isn’t room for them. Like the appendix, wisdom teeth
have become vestigial organs. One estimate says 35 percent of the population is
born without wisdom teeth, and some say they will disappear altogether.
3. We’re Resisting
Diseases
In 2007, a group of
researchers looking for signs of recent evolution uncovered 1,800 genes that
have only become prevalent in humans in the last 40,000 years, many of which
are devoted to fighting infectious diseases like malaria. More than a dozen new
genetic variants for fighting malaria are spreading rapidly among Africans.
Another study found that natural selection has favored city-dwellers. Living in
cities has produced a genetic variant that allows us to be more resistant to
diseases like tuberculosis and leprosy. “This seems to be an elegant example of
evolution in action,” says Dr. Ian Barnes from the School of Biological
Sciences at Royal Holloway. “It flags up the importance of a very recent aspect
of our evolution as a species, the development of cities as a selective force.”
4. Our Brains Are
Shrinking
While we may like to
believe our big brains make us smarter than the rest of the animal world, our
brains have actually been shrinking over the last 30,000 years. The average
volume of the human brain has decreased from 1,500 cubic centimeters to 1,350
cubic centimeters, which is equivalent to a chunk the size of a tennis ball. There are several
different conclusions as to why this is: One group of researchers suspects our
shrinking brains mean we are in fact getting dumber. Historically, brain size
decreased as societies became larger and more complex, suggesting that the
safety net of modern society negated the correlation between intelligence and
survival. But another, more encouraging theory says our brains are shrinking
not because we’re getting dumber, but because smaller brains are more
efficient. This theory suggests that, as they shrink, our brains are being
rewired to work faster but take up less room. There’s also a theory that
smaller brains are an evolutionary advantage because they make us less
aggressive beings, allowing us to work together to solve problems, rather than
tear each other to shreds.
5. We Have Blue Eyes
Originally, we all
had brown eyes. But about 10,000 years ago, someone who lived near the Black
Sea developed a genetic mutation that turned brown eyes blue. While the reason
blue eyes have persisted remains a bit of a mystery, one theory is that they
act as a sort of paternity test. “There is strong evolutionary pressure for a
man not to invest his paternal resources in another man’s child,” says the lead
author of a study on the development of our baby blues. Because it is virtually
impossible for two blue-eyed mates to create a brown-eyed baby, our blue-eyed
male ancestors may have sought out blue-eyed mates as a way of ensuring
fidelity. This would partially explain why, in a recent study, blue-eyed men
rated blue-eyed women as more attractive compared to brown-eyed women, whereas
females and brown-eyed men expressed no preference.
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