>From The Sunday Times
August 30, 2009
White Europeans evolved only `5,500 years ago'
shoppers on London's Oxford Street
Jonathan Leake

    *  

White Europeans could have evolved as recently as 5,500 years ago, according to 
research which suggests that the early humans who populated Britain and 
Scandinavia had dark skins for millenniums.

It was only when early humans gave up hunter-gathering and switched to farming 
about 5,500 years ago that white skin began to be favoured, say the researchers.

This is because farmed food was deficient in vitamin D, a vital nutrient. 
Humans can make this in their skin when exposed to sunlight, but dark skin is 
much less efficient at it.

In places such as northern Europe, where sunlight levels are low, the ability 
to make vitamin D more efficiently could have been crucial to survival.
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Johan Moan, of the Institute of Physics at the University of Oslo, said in a 
research paper: "In England, from 5,500-5,200 years ago the food changed 
rapidly away from fish as an important food source. This led to a rapid 
development of ... light skin."

Moan, who worked with Richard Setlow, a biophysicist at Brookhaven National 
Laboratory in New York state, said vitamin D deficiency could be lethal. 
Research links it with heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and reduced immunity.

Their research says: "Cold climates and high latitudes would speed up the need 
for skin lightening. Agricultural food was an insufficient source of vitamin D, 
and solar radiation was too low to produce enough vitamin D in dark skin."

Such findings need to be treated with caution. The history of the colonisation 
of Europe is highly complex because its climate has been dominated by a series 
of ice ages, punctuated by warm periods.

This means early humans ventured to Europe not just once but many times over 
the past 700,000 years, returning each time the ice melted only to be driven 
back again when it returned.

Furthermore, the ice ages coincided with, and may even have driven, the 
evolution of modern humans, with several species such as Neanderthals and 
Cro-Magnons appearing at various times.

The idea that human evolution has often turned on chance mutations is well 
established. Some researchers have linked the entire evolution of language with 
mutations in a gene known as FoxP2 occcuring about 50,000 years ago.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/article6814896.ece

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