Alan Kleinman
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- Feb 14, 2021
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Absolutely they do match. DNA microevolution depends on population size (number of replications) whether you are talking about bacteria, humans, apes, or any other replicator. It also depends on the mutation rate and the number of selection conditions acting on the population. Those are the variables that determine whether adaptive evolution can or cannot occur. That's why the 1 billion people that existed before 10,000 years ago can get a sickle cell mutation or a lactase persistence mutation but lack the population size necessary to get variants that have multiple adaptive mutations.This literally does not answer my question: Do the assumptions in that model match the reality of human or other ape populations? If not, why should we give it any credence.
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