Evo-Ed: History, Genetics, and Human Skin Color
This is part 4 of our multi-part series on Human Skin Color. The human species has been on the global scene for about 200,000 years. Skin color hasn't been a fixed characteristic over that time. The earliest humans likely had dark skin, which was a departure from earlier ancestor species that featured light skin and coarse body hair. Dark skin, and less body hair helped early humans to effectively thermoregulate, while having the photoprotective properties that skin pigment affords. Skin color has been in constant flux in the millennia since the dawn of our species, and broadly correlates to a latitudinal gradient of sub exposure. Today, humans come in a wide and beautiful array of different skin shades and tones. For more information on the biology of human skin color, visit www.evo-ed.org. Support for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation's Division of Undergraduate Education program under Award No. DUE2020221

Evo-Ed: Skin Color and Skin Cancer

Why Did Humans Become Different Colors?

Human Evolution: The Complete Story Of Our Existence

Why Did Humans Evolve In Africa?

The History of Colorism in India

Ancient Human Species We Once Co-Existed With

I Spent 90 Days Building, Cooking and Surviving in the Rainforest: Solo Bushcraft (Full)

Why the Mongols Vanished After Conquering Everything

Neanderthals Were Absolute Freaks Of Nature

Why Europeans And Asians Evolved So Differently

Why This 20,000-Year-Old Painting Terrified Archaeologists

Evolution from ape to man. From Proconsul to Homo heidelbergensis

Nothing about the honey badger is normal... and here is why

Humans May Be Far Older Than We Thought

Why Religions All Come From The Middle East and India

The Most Controversial Idea in Biology

If You Have Red Hair, Your Ancestors Were From Here

The Rarest Human Possible

Every Major Religion & What They Actually Believe Explained

