[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]

NYTimes Connections - Coaxial - Jan 2, 2025 - 4:55am
 
Republican Party - VV - Jan 2, 2025 - 4:51am
 
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum - VV - Jan 2, 2025 - 4:44am
 
Wordle - daily game - Coaxial - Jan 2, 2025 - 4:38am
 
January 2025 Photo Theme - Beginnings - LordQuercia - Jan 2, 2025 - 3:45am
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - jpfueler - Jan 2, 2025 - 2:10am
 
Hell Is ... - LordQuercia - Jan 1, 2025 - 10:45pm
 
Carplay Issue? Song does not start playing. - LordQuercia - Jan 1, 2025 - 10:28pm
 
Trump - NoEnzLefttoSplit - Jan 1, 2025 - 10:19pm
 
Bad Restaurant Promos - GeneP59 - Jan 1, 2025 - 8:43pm
 
Rock Movies/Documentaries - Antigone - Jan 1, 2025 - 6:01pm
 
Mixtape Culture Club - KurtfromLaQuinta - Jan 1, 2025 - 5:02pm
 
• • • What Makes You Happy? • • •  - buddy - Jan 1, 2025 - 4:13pm
 
Things You Thought Today - Red_Dragon - Jan 1, 2025 - 2:42pm
 
Update to Previously Submitted UK Mobile/cellular data S... - jago_g - Jan 1, 2025 - 2:35pm
 
Musky Mythology - islander - Jan 1, 2025 - 2:14pm
 
260,000 Posts in one thread? - Steely_D - Jan 1, 2025 - 12:43pm
 
Ukraine - R_P - Jan 1, 2025 - 11:06am
 
NY Times Strands - maryte - Jan 1, 2025 - 8:39am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - GeneP59 - Jan 1, 2025 - 7:02am
 
Today in History - Red_Dragon - Jan 1, 2025 - 6:47am
 
Live Music - oldviolin - Dec 31, 2024 - 10:25pm
 
The Obituary Page - buddy - Dec 31, 2024 - 9:30pm
 
TWO WORDS - Bill_J - Dec 31, 2024 - 7:08pm
 
kurtster's quiet vinyl - kurtster - Dec 31, 2024 - 3:42pm
 
Great Old Songs You Rarely Hear Anymore - KurtfromLaQuinta - Dec 31, 2024 - 3:38pm
 
Radio Paradise NFL Pick'em Group - sunybuny - Dec 31, 2024 - 3:29pm
 
Name My Band - Isabeau - Dec 31, 2024 - 2:10pm
 
Books - R_P - Dec 31, 2024 - 1:56pm
 
Song of the Day - oldviolin - Dec 31, 2024 - 1:54pm
 
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •  - oldviolin - Dec 31, 2024 - 1:49pm
 
Private messages in a public forum - Isabeau - Dec 31, 2024 - 1:34pm
 
Russia - black321 - Dec 31, 2024 - 7:15am
 
2050 episode posts missing date/timestamp - rgio - Dec 31, 2024 - 6:15am
 
send support by check? - Steve - Dec 30, 2024 - 2:54pm
 
Into the Future - KurtfromLaQuinta - Dec 30, 2024 - 2:23pm
 
Song information - Proclivities - Dec 30, 2024 - 11:11am
 
• • • BRING OUT YOUR DEAD • • •  - oldviolin - Dec 30, 2024 - 8:48am
 
Little known information... maybe even facts - oldviolin - Dec 30, 2024 - 8:10am
 
Best movies ever? - ScottFromWyoming - Dec 30, 2024 - 7:56am
 
Surfing! - kurtster - Dec 29, 2024 - 6:54pm
 
What are you doing RIGHT NOW? - kurtster - Dec 29, 2024 - 5:38pm
 
Billionaires - Isabeau - Dec 29, 2024 - 3:04pm
 
Israel - R_P - Dec 29, 2024 - 11:41am
 
COVID-19 - R_P - Dec 29, 2024 - 11:04am
 
December 2024 Photo Theme - Lighting - Isabeau - Dec 28, 2024 - 11:19am
 
RP Swag - garyalex - Dec 28, 2024 - 9:24am
 
Psychiatric Drugs Replacing Talk Therapy - Isabeau - Dec 28, 2024 - 5:37am
 
Music News - DaveInSaoMiguel - Dec 28, 2024 - 1:51am
 
Vinyl Only Spin List - Steely_D - Dec 27, 2024 - 7:00pm
 
Things that are just WRONG - buddy - Dec 27, 2024 - 6:56pm
 
Interesting Words - kcar - Dec 27, 2024 - 5:27pm
 
Dialing 1-800-Manbird - buddy - Dec 27, 2024 - 4:40pm
 
Movie Recommendation - buddy - Dec 27, 2024 - 2:28pm
 
What Are You Going To Do Today? - GeneP59 - Dec 27, 2024 - 1:41pm
 
RP App for Android - richardsmcse - Dec 27, 2024 - 12:55pm
 
Artificial Intelligence - R_P - Dec 27, 2024 - 12:39pm
 
what else do you listen to? (RP alternatives) - BenSonic - Dec 27, 2024 - 12:26pm
 
Solar / Wind / Geothermal / Efficiency Energy - islander - Dec 27, 2024 - 11:15am
 
New Music - skyguy - Dec 27, 2024 - 10:31am
 
2024 Fundraising Drive Feedback - Djaxon - Dec 27, 2024 - 7:51am
 
Rhetorical questions - oldviolin - Dec 26, 2024 - 8:20pm
 
Country Up The Bumpkin - KurtfromLaQuinta - Dec 26, 2024 - 3:51pm
 
Baseball, anyone? - ScottFromWyoming - Dec 26, 2024 - 3:31pm
 
Regarding Birds - Isabeau - Dec 26, 2024 - 12:52pm
 
USA! USA! USA! - R_P - Dec 26, 2024 - 9:58am
 
Things I Saw Today... - Red_Dragon - Dec 25, 2024 - 1:38pm
 
Derplahoma! - Red_Dragon - Dec 25, 2024 - 8:03am
 
Gotta Get Your Drink On - Isabeau - Dec 24, 2024 - 2:46pm
 
Capitalism and Consumerism... now what? - Red_Dragon - Dec 24, 2024 - 8:00am
 
Who is? - oldviolin - Dec 23, 2024 - 7:08pm
 
Lyrics that are stuck in your head today... - oldviolin - Dec 23, 2024 - 7:03pm
 
Love & Hate - oldviolin - Dec 23, 2024 - 6:34pm
 
Democratic Party - kurtster - Dec 23, 2024 - 5:44pm
 
Outstanding Covers - kurtster - Dec 23, 2024 - 2:32pm
 
Index » Regional/Local » USA/Canada » Evolution! Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 121, 122, 123  Next
Post to this Topic
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 13, 2024 - 6:05pm


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Oct 21, 2024 - 5:36pm

Why the ‘missing link’ fossil was almost missed
One of the 20th-century's biggest quests was to find the “missing link,” a being who connected humans to their pre-historic ancestors. It was also the height of scientific racism.
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 13, 2024 - 10:34am

Early Humans Left Africa Much Earlier Than Previously Thought
Scientists have found evidence of several waves of migration by looking at the genetic signatures of human interbreeding with Neanderthals.
Dr. Paabo’s team also discovered that living, non-African people carry fragments of Neanderthal DNA, a signature of interbreeding from long ago. In May, a team of researchers estimated that Neanderthals and modern humans interbred during a short period of time, between 47,000 and 40,000 years ago.

But some Neanderthal DNA does not fit into this neat picture. The Neanderthal Y chromosome, for example, is more similar to the Y chromosome found in living humans than it is to the rest of the Neanderthal genome.

In 2020, researchers offered an explanation: Neanderthal males inherited a new Y chromosome from humans between 370,000 and 100,000 years ago. But that would have made sense only if a wave of Africans had expanded out of the continent much earlier than scientists had thought.

Researchers have recently found evidence for such an early wave in the genomes of living Africans.

Dr. Tishkoff and her colleagues compared the genome of a 122,000-year-old Neanderthal fossil with the genomes of 180 people from 12 populations across Africa. Previous studies had found no sign of Neanderthal DNA in African genomes. But Dr. Tishkoff’s group detected tiny pieces of Neanderthal-like DNA scattered across all 12 of the populations they studied.

When they examined the size and sequence of those genetic fragments, they concluded that Neanderthals inherited them from early Africans. That meant an early wave of Africans expanded into Europe or Asia about 250,000 years ago and interbred with Neanderthals.

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: May 30, 2024 - 12:22pm

Scientists generate the first complete chromosome sequences from non-human primates
Complete X and Y chromosome sequences from six primate species reveal species diversity and insights into evolution.
A team of researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health have generated the first complete chromosome sequences from non-human primates. Published in Nature, these sequences uncover remarkable variation between the Y chromosomes of different species, showing rapid evolution, in addition to revealing previously unstudied regions of great ape genomes. Since these primate species are the closest living relatives to humans, the new sequences can provide insights into human evolution.

The researchers focused on the X and Y chromosomes, which play roles in sexual development and fertility, among many other biological functions. They sequenced chromosomes from five great ape species, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla and Bornean and Sumatran orangutans, as well as one other primate species that is more distantly related to humans, the siamang gibbon. (...)

The researchers found that over 90% of the ape X chromosome sequences aligned to the human X chromosome, showing that the X chromosomes have remained relatively unchanged over millions of years of evolution. However, only 14% to 27% of the ape Y chromosome sequences aligned to the human Y chromosome. (...)

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 2, 2023 - 5:29pm

Meet the man who has transformed our understanding of evolution
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the Canadian evolutionary biologist Dolph Schluter the prestigious Crafoord Prize for his work on the mechanics of evolution, which has fundamentally changed our understanding of how the tree of life branches out.
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Gilead


Posted: Oct 19, 2022 - 6:54am

 miamizsun wrote:

some get stoned
some get strange
sooner or later we all walk on




What's that AI smokin'?
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Oct 19, 2022 - 6:11am

some get stoned
some get strange
sooner or later we all walk on


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Oct 3, 2022 - 12:18pm

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Svante Pääbo on Monday for his discoveries concerning the genomes of extinct hominids and human evolution. (...)

“Through his pioneering research, Svante Pääbo — this year’s Nobel Prize laureate in physiology or medicine — accomplished something seemingly impossible: sequencing the genome of the Neanderthal, an extinct relative of present-day humans,” the Nobel committee said in a statement.

“Pääbo’s discoveries have generated new understanding of our evolutionary history,” the statement said, adding that this research had helped establish the burgeoning science of “paleogenomics,” or the study of genetic material from ancient pathogens.

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 1, 2022 - 9:45pm

How Much Do Your Genes Shape Your Politics? *
They’re not everything, but they’re not nothing, either.
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 7, 2022 - 2:03pm

Meet the man who can explain the first 3 billion years of life on our planet
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jan 24, 2022 - 2:11pm

Omicron’s Radical Evolution*
Thirteen of Omicron’s mutations should have hurt the variant’s chances of survival. Instead, they worked together to make it thrive.
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jan 3, 2022 - 6:15pm


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 30, 2021 - 6:09pm

Most Detailed Tree of Life Ever Made That You Can Actually Explore!

www.onezoom.org

miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 4, 2021 - 5:57am

 rgio wrote:
 miamizsun wrote:

These Mice Pups Inherited Immunity From Their Parents—But Not Through DNA

The rules of inheritance are supposedly easy. Dad’s DNA mixes with mom’s to generate a new combination. Over time, random mutations will give some individuals better adaptability to the environment. The mutations are selected through generations, and the species becomes stronger.
much more


Good morning indeed...I'm already exhausted reading this... So...let's just say they're right, and that the same thing happens in humans.  Then, let's assume in a few generations, a really nasty form of COVID comes along, and only those who have been vaccinating (grandparents, parents, individuals) will have the trained epigenetic coding to respond to the "really bad strain"... is it possible we could "breed out" the anti-vaccers?   Kids...pick your reproductive partners well!
 
the precise answer is definitely possibly maybe
or theoretically it looks like it if we squint a bit (of course the original article is behind a paywall)
seriously, we're finding out more and more regarding epigenetics
short answer is that we have a lot of code/dna and we pass it on
that code has an on/off function
it looks like that certain immune code that gets turned on can be passed on to offspring in the on position
biotech is in the early stages of exponential-like discovery
writing or modifying biological code has huge potential
we'll see what happens and where it goes..
i encourage people to use a platform like twitter to aggregate this type of news
most of these companies have a feed to glean for their projects


rgio

rgio Avatar

Location: West Jersey
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 4, 2021 - 5:12am

 miamizsun wrote:

These Mice Pups Inherited Immunity From Their Parents—But Not Through DNA

The rules of inheritance are supposedly easy. Dad’s DNA mixes with mom’s to generate a new combination. Over time, random mutations will give some individuals better adaptability to the environment. The mutations are selected through generations, and the species becomes stronger.
much more



Good morning indeed...I'm already exhausted reading this...

So...let's just say they're right, and that the same thing happens in humans.  Then, let's assume in a few generations, a really nasty form of COVID comes along, and only those who have been vaccinating (grandparents, parents, individuals) will have the trained epigenetic coding to respond to the "really bad strain"... is it possible we could "breed out" the anti-vaccers?  

Kids...pick your reproductive partners well!
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 4, 2021 - 4:55am

These Mice Pups Inherited Immunity From Their Parents—But Not Through DNA

The rules of inheritance are supposedly easy. Dad’s DNA mixes with mom’s to generate a new combination. Over time, random mutations will give some individuals better adaptability to the environment. The mutations are selected through generations, and the species becomes stronger.

But what if that central dogma is only part of the picture?

A new study in Nature Immunology is ruffling feathers in that it re-contextualizes evolution. Mice infected with a non-lethal dose of bacteria, once recovered, can pass on a turbo-boosted immune system to their kids and grandkids—all without changing any DNA sequences. The trick seems to be epigenetic changes—that is, how genes are turned on or off—in their sperm. In other words, compared to millennia of evolution, there’s a faster route for a species to thrive. For any individual, it’s possible to gain survivability and adaptability in a single lifetime, and those changes can be passed on to offspring.

“We wanted to test if we could observe the inheritance of some traits to subsequent generations, let’s say independent of natural selection,” said study author Dr. Jorge Dominguez-Andres at Radboud University Nijmegen Centre.

“The existence of epigenetic heredity is of paramount biological relevance, but the extent to which it happens in mammals remains largely unknown,” said Drs. Paola de Candia at the IRCCS MultiMedica, Milan, and Giuseppe Matarese at the Treg Cell Lab, Dipartimento di Medicina Molecolare e Biotecnologie Mediche at the Università degli Studi di Napoli in Naples, who were not involved in the study. “Their work is a big conceptual leap.”

much more

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Sep 28, 2021 - 6:25pm

How Humans Lost Their Tails
A new study suggests that a single genetic mutation helps explain why monkeys have tails, while apes and people do not.
For half a billion years or so, our ancestors sprouted tails. As fish, they used their tails to swim through the Cambrian seas. Much later, when they evolved into primates, their tails helped them stay balanced as they raced from branch to branch through Eocene jungles. But then, roughly 25 million years ago, the tails disappeared.

Manbird

Manbird Avatar

Location: La Villa Toscana
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 17, 2021 - 7:00pm

 miamizsun wrote:




Amon Tobin is pretty awesome. I've always liked his music and experimental sound.
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 17, 2021 - 5:51pm


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 16, 2021 - 9:56am

The Longest-Running Evolution Experiment

Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 121, 122, 123  Next