Snip from Louise's post:
DNA analysis also shows a picture of human origins different from a literal
reading of Genesis: namely, modern humans come from a common ancestor pool
of about 10,000 individuals (not 2) that lived in Africa about 100,000 years
ago.
First let me say that I realize that this is what was being stated by Mr.
Collins. Not being a DNA expert, am I to understand that DNA evidence shows
that homo sapiens sapiens come from about 10,000 individuals? If so then
were did those 10,000 individuals come from? If followed further back is
there a point at which there are only 2, or did the genetic mutation
spontaneously occur among this 10,000+/- new type of man?
I can picture a mating between two older species that produced at least 1
new type (homo sapiens) that then became the predominant DNA for any
subsequent matings of descendants. I can also vision a sudden change in
environment that could cause all of the older species in a localized area to
produce genetically different offspring. As an example, mutation caused by
radioactive exposure.
Is there any reference someone can provide that theorizes the cause or
explanation for not having just 1 or 2 original homo sapiens?
Don
Received on Fri Oct 28 05:20:15 2005
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