How would the skin color of white Europeans change over 1,000 years in subtropics?

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I am building a country in today’s Argentina (32°-40° latitude) where Europeans would have settled in 10th century. Would their skin color change over that period?







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    32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
    – RonJohn
    Sep 3 at 6:36










  • Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
    – Drag and Drop
    Sep 3 at 13:58














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I am building a country in today’s Argentina (32°-40° latitude) where Europeans would have settled in 10th century. Would their skin color change over that period?







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  • 9




    32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
    – RonJohn
    Sep 3 at 6:36










  • Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
    – Drag and Drop
    Sep 3 at 13:58












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I am building a country in today’s Argentina (32°-40° latitude) where Europeans would have settled in 10th century. Would their skin color change over that period?







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I am building a country in today’s Argentina (32°-40° latitude) where Europeans would have settled in 10th century. Would their skin color change over that period?









share|improve this question











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asked Sep 2 at 11:16









Martin L

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10015







  • 9




    32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
    – RonJohn
    Sep 3 at 6:36










  • Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
    – Drag and Drop
    Sep 3 at 13:58












  • 9




    32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
    – RonJohn
    Sep 3 at 6:36










  • Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
    – Drag and Drop
    Sep 3 at 13:58







9




9




32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
– RonJohn
Sep 3 at 6:36




32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.
– RonJohn
Sep 3 at 6:36












Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
– Drag and Drop
Sep 3 at 13:58




Sunburn are not engraved in DNA, you are left with basic genertic. Skin color evolved based on reproduction. Temperature or humidity won't change a thing.
– Drag and Drop
Sep 3 at 13:58










6 Answers
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Hard to say...



Human skin colour of indigenous populations correlate with geographic ultraviolet radiation. Paraphrasing the linked article - research suggests this has happened in the last 50,000 years, sometimes in as little as 2,500 years where natural selection encourages this. So it might be expected that after 40% of the minimum time period there may be a perceptible change.



However, natural selection may not play as big a role in this situation if the clothing of the Europeans provides enough sun protection to reduce the survival relevance of skin pigmentation. Look at the British in colonial India. The combination of circumstances for this case may make the pigmentation change take 5,000 years, or 10,000 years, so the change after a mere 1000 years may be negligible.



More importantly, it was implied in the question that the Europeans were a discrete population. In practice, if there are indigenous populations in the area there is likely to be interbreeding between them over a thousand year time period. This mingling of genes would result in a far greater change in skin tone than evolutionary pressures over the same time period. On the flipside, if the colony maintains trade and immigration / emigration to and from its European point of origin then the rate of change would be slowed significantly.



(Note that unless a lot of Europeans are in the colony, such interbreeding is essential for sufficient genetic diversity. Lots of other questions have explored the "minimum colony size" issues so no need to replay them here, just note colony size as a viability consideration.)






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  • Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
    – abarnert
    Sep 2 at 17:31










  • You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
    – anon
    Sep 2 at 21:55










  • Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
    – JohnWDailey
    Sep 3 at 2:16










  • In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
    – Ryan V. Bissell
    Sep 3 at 15:35

















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18
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Europoid peoples actually do live in the subtropics. They always did



There are lots and lots of Europoid (that is, for Americans, "Caucasian") people who live in the subtropics. Berbers, Arabs, Touaregs, Egyptians... They look like this:



Zinedine ZidaneIbrahim Ag AlhabibMohammad bin Salman Al Saud



Zinedine Zidane, a famous Frech footballer of Berber descent. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, a singer of Touareg descent. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al
Saud of Arabia. Pictures from Wikipedia.



The skin tone of Europoid people ranges from very light in Scandinavia to quite dark in Egypt and India. To the extent that human race has any biological meaning, Egyptians, Arabs and Persians are clearly the same race as Norwegians; they have the same skeletal and muscular structure, the same blood groups, the same kind of hair, suffer from the same diseases and react in the same way to medications.



Which Europeans?



There is very very little physical difference between Greeks, Spaniards and Italians on one hand, and Berbers, Arabs and Persians on the other. So it is quite obvious that by "Europeans" the question does not mean southern Europeans.



So it must be some kind of central or northern Europeans, because otherwise the question does not make sense. Now, northen Europeans come into two varieties: most have skin which tans when exposed to sunlight; other have skin which burns which exposed to sunlight.



For those whose skin tans when exposed to sunlight (most Englishmen, Frenchmen, Germans, about all central Europeans) they will change color in a matter of weeks. Fun factoid: in ancient Egyptian paintings it was conventional to depict women with a much lighter tone than men. Guess why.



Amenemhet and His Wife Hemet



The priest Amenemhet and his wife Hemet. Ancient Egyptian fresco, around 1800 or 1900 BCE. Note the difference in skin tone between the man and the woman. Reproduction from Wikipedia, public domain.



Admixture admixture admixture



One thousand years is a very long time to maintain ethnic purity; so long that it's guaranteed not to happen. All the people of European descent are related if we go back to our ancestors in the 10th century. We are all descendants of emperor Charlemagne; and we are all equally descendants of emperor Charlemagnes valet. In one thousand years the population will be thourougly admixed with the original inhabitants of the place.






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  • 1




    Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
    – user49466
    Sep 2 at 13:17






  • 1




    [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
    – user49466
    Sep 2 at 13:19






  • 2




    @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
    – AlexP
    Sep 2 at 13:27







  • 2




    I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
    – user49466
    Sep 2 at 14:06











  • Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
    – Adrien
    Sep 3 at 8:20

















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(Note: 32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.)



No, because clothes.



Consider these three white men in the (very hot, very sunny!) Australian Outback. All are wearing wide brimmed hats, and two are wearing long-sleeved shirts. When the shirtless young guy gets sunburned once too often (after attracting a nubile young female by displaying how fit his genes are), he'll start wearing long-sleeved shirts, too.



More importantly, as long as he passes on his DNA (and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle) before dying of skin cancer, there's no evolutionary pressure for darker skinned people.



enter image description here






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  • 2




    If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
    – alamar
    Sep 3 at 9:14






  • 2




    @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
    – RonJohn
    Sep 3 at 11:29

















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Boers in South Africa are some of the whitest people on earth because their ancestors came from northern Europe. They've been in South Africa for 400 years with no sign of being darker than the people they descended from. People with mixed ancestry aside.



There are pale skinned redheads in hot arid parts of the Middle East. Descendants of ancient populations or at least medieval ones so again several hundred years and still their original colour minus mixing with other groups.



If pigmentation is due to the environment then it was established long before clothes were the norm and clothes were being worn 6000 years ago at least.






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    up vote
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    If you're talking about the actual Argentina, and not just using it as an example for the climate you're looking for, I think it hardly matters what nature would have done.



    Argentina is currently populated mostly by Caucasian people, which wouldn't make sense given the skin color of the native inhabitants of South America as a whole and the territory currently called Argentina in particular. The real reason is that non-European people were slowly eradicated in several wars like President Roca's Conquest of the Desert (Conquista del Desierto in Spanish) and the war with Paraguay, or they were systematically marginalized by their skin color and/or native origin.



    Given how real history turned out, I believe that a colonization war lasting from the X century to the beginning of the XIX century* would result in an even more extended and thorough culling of non-Caucasian or non-European people than what we can see today.



    *Moving the colonization of the New Continent from the XV century to the X century would probably not change the independence date by much, or at least it shouldn't make it happen any sooner, considering that Argentina's independence was part of the independence movement triggered in the whole continent by the fall of the Bastille.






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      Ask Mexicans. Or anyone in South America. Basically mildly brownish tint.






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      • Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
        – Blueriver
        Sep 3 at 20:50










      • @Blueriver good point
        – Jack Shephard
        Sep 4 at 0:06










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      6 Answers
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      6 Answers
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      Hard to say...



      Human skin colour of indigenous populations correlate with geographic ultraviolet radiation. Paraphrasing the linked article - research suggests this has happened in the last 50,000 years, sometimes in as little as 2,500 years where natural selection encourages this. So it might be expected that after 40% of the minimum time period there may be a perceptible change.



      However, natural selection may not play as big a role in this situation if the clothing of the Europeans provides enough sun protection to reduce the survival relevance of skin pigmentation. Look at the British in colonial India. The combination of circumstances for this case may make the pigmentation change take 5,000 years, or 10,000 years, so the change after a mere 1000 years may be negligible.



      More importantly, it was implied in the question that the Europeans were a discrete population. In practice, if there are indigenous populations in the area there is likely to be interbreeding between them over a thousand year time period. This mingling of genes would result in a far greater change in skin tone than evolutionary pressures over the same time period. On the flipside, if the colony maintains trade and immigration / emigration to and from its European point of origin then the rate of change would be slowed significantly.



      (Note that unless a lot of Europeans are in the colony, such interbreeding is essential for sufficient genetic diversity. Lots of other questions have explored the "minimum colony size" issues so no need to replay them here, just note colony size as a viability consideration.)






      share|improve this answer




















      • Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
        – abarnert
        Sep 2 at 17:31










      • You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
        – anon
        Sep 2 at 21:55










      • Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
        – JohnWDailey
        Sep 3 at 2:16










      • In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
        – Ryan V. Bissell
        Sep 3 at 15:35














      up vote
      31
      down vote













      Hard to say...



      Human skin colour of indigenous populations correlate with geographic ultraviolet radiation. Paraphrasing the linked article - research suggests this has happened in the last 50,000 years, sometimes in as little as 2,500 years where natural selection encourages this. So it might be expected that after 40% of the minimum time period there may be a perceptible change.



      However, natural selection may not play as big a role in this situation if the clothing of the Europeans provides enough sun protection to reduce the survival relevance of skin pigmentation. Look at the British in colonial India. The combination of circumstances for this case may make the pigmentation change take 5,000 years, or 10,000 years, so the change after a mere 1000 years may be negligible.



      More importantly, it was implied in the question that the Europeans were a discrete population. In practice, if there are indigenous populations in the area there is likely to be interbreeding between them over a thousand year time period. This mingling of genes would result in a far greater change in skin tone than evolutionary pressures over the same time period. On the flipside, if the colony maintains trade and immigration / emigration to and from its European point of origin then the rate of change would be slowed significantly.



      (Note that unless a lot of Europeans are in the colony, such interbreeding is essential for sufficient genetic diversity. Lots of other questions have explored the "minimum colony size" issues so no need to replay them here, just note colony size as a viability consideration.)






      share|improve this answer




















      • Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
        – abarnert
        Sep 2 at 17:31










      • You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
        – anon
        Sep 2 at 21:55










      • Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
        – JohnWDailey
        Sep 3 at 2:16










      • In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
        – Ryan V. Bissell
        Sep 3 at 15:35












      up vote
      31
      down vote










      up vote
      31
      down vote









      Hard to say...



      Human skin colour of indigenous populations correlate with geographic ultraviolet radiation. Paraphrasing the linked article - research suggests this has happened in the last 50,000 years, sometimes in as little as 2,500 years where natural selection encourages this. So it might be expected that after 40% of the minimum time period there may be a perceptible change.



      However, natural selection may not play as big a role in this situation if the clothing of the Europeans provides enough sun protection to reduce the survival relevance of skin pigmentation. Look at the British in colonial India. The combination of circumstances for this case may make the pigmentation change take 5,000 years, or 10,000 years, so the change after a mere 1000 years may be negligible.



      More importantly, it was implied in the question that the Europeans were a discrete population. In practice, if there are indigenous populations in the area there is likely to be interbreeding between them over a thousand year time period. This mingling of genes would result in a far greater change in skin tone than evolutionary pressures over the same time period. On the flipside, if the colony maintains trade and immigration / emigration to and from its European point of origin then the rate of change would be slowed significantly.



      (Note that unless a lot of Europeans are in the colony, such interbreeding is essential for sufficient genetic diversity. Lots of other questions have explored the "minimum colony size" issues so no need to replay them here, just note colony size as a viability consideration.)






      share|improve this answer












      Hard to say...



      Human skin colour of indigenous populations correlate with geographic ultraviolet radiation. Paraphrasing the linked article - research suggests this has happened in the last 50,000 years, sometimes in as little as 2,500 years where natural selection encourages this. So it might be expected that after 40% of the minimum time period there may be a perceptible change.



      However, natural selection may not play as big a role in this situation if the clothing of the Europeans provides enough sun protection to reduce the survival relevance of skin pigmentation. Look at the British in colonial India. The combination of circumstances for this case may make the pigmentation change take 5,000 years, or 10,000 years, so the change after a mere 1000 years may be negligible.



      More importantly, it was implied in the question that the Europeans were a discrete population. In practice, if there are indigenous populations in the area there is likely to be interbreeding between them over a thousand year time period. This mingling of genes would result in a far greater change in skin tone than evolutionary pressures over the same time period. On the flipside, if the colony maintains trade and immigration / emigration to and from its European point of origin then the rate of change would be slowed significantly.



      (Note that unless a lot of Europeans are in the colony, such interbreeding is essential for sufficient genetic diversity. Lots of other questions have explored the "minimum colony size" issues so no need to replay them here, just note colony size as a viability consideration.)







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Sep 2 at 12:21









      KerrAvon2055

      2,2771513




      2,2771513











      • Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
        – abarnert
        Sep 2 at 17:31










      • You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
        – anon
        Sep 2 at 21:55










      • Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
        – JohnWDailey
        Sep 3 at 2:16










      • In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
        – Ryan V. Bissell
        Sep 3 at 15:35
















      • Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
        – abarnert
        Sep 2 at 17:31










      • You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
        – anon
        Sep 2 at 21:55










      • Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
        – JohnWDailey
        Sep 3 at 2:16










      • In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
        – Ryan V. Bissell
        Sep 3 at 15:35















      Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
      – abarnert
      Sep 2 at 17:31




      Good point with the interbreeding. After all, many of the people in Argentina today are descendants of Europeans who migrated half a millennium ago. But they're also descendants of natives, people who migrated from much farther south or north, slaves brought from Africa and elsewhere, etc.
      – abarnert
      Sep 2 at 17:31












      You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
      – anon
      Sep 2 at 21:55




      You also have to consider complicated subjects like sexual attraction. If a society thought being blue was hot then that trait could be perpetuated.
      – anon
      Sep 2 at 21:55












      Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
      – JohnWDailey
      Sep 3 at 2:16




      Not true. If it were, the Inuit would have been even paler than Caucasians. No, the real key to human skin color is Vitamin D, not latitude.
      – JohnWDailey
      Sep 3 at 2:16












      In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
      – Ryan V. Bissell
      Sep 3 at 15:35




      In the absence of strong natural selection pressures, unnatural selection can also play a part; for instance, if the population has a social preference that is biased towards darker skin.
      – Ryan V. Bissell
      Sep 3 at 15:35










      up vote
      18
      down vote













      Europoid peoples actually do live in the subtropics. They always did



      There are lots and lots of Europoid (that is, for Americans, "Caucasian") people who live in the subtropics. Berbers, Arabs, Touaregs, Egyptians... They look like this:



      Zinedine ZidaneIbrahim Ag AlhabibMohammad bin Salman Al Saud



      Zinedine Zidane, a famous Frech footballer of Berber descent. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, a singer of Touareg descent. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al
      Saud of Arabia. Pictures from Wikipedia.



      The skin tone of Europoid people ranges from very light in Scandinavia to quite dark in Egypt and India. To the extent that human race has any biological meaning, Egyptians, Arabs and Persians are clearly the same race as Norwegians; they have the same skeletal and muscular structure, the same blood groups, the same kind of hair, suffer from the same diseases and react in the same way to medications.



      Which Europeans?



      There is very very little physical difference between Greeks, Spaniards and Italians on one hand, and Berbers, Arabs and Persians on the other. So it is quite obvious that by "Europeans" the question does not mean southern Europeans.



      So it must be some kind of central or northern Europeans, because otherwise the question does not make sense. Now, northen Europeans come into two varieties: most have skin which tans when exposed to sunlight; other have skin which burns which exposed to sunlight.



      For those whose skin tans when exposed to sunlight (most Englishmen, Frenchmen, Germans, about all central Europeans) they will change color in a matter of weeks. Fun factoid: in ancient Egyptian paintings it was conventional to depict women with a much lighter tone than men. Guess why.



      Amenemhet and His Wife Hemet



      The priest Amenemhet and his wife Hemet. Ancient Egyptian fresco, around 1800 or 1900 BCE. Note the difference in skin tone between the man and the woman. Reproduction from Wikipedia, public domain.



      Admixture admixture admixture



      One thousand years is a very long time to maintain ethnic purity; so long that it's guaranteed not to happen. All the people of European descent are related if we go back to our ancestors in the 10th century. We are all descendants of emperor Charlemagne; and we are all equally descendants of emperor Charlemagnes valet. In one thousand years the population will be thourougly admixed with the original inhabitants of the place.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 1




        Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:17






      • 1




        [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:19






      • 2




        @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
        – AlexP
        Sep 2 at 13:27







      • 2




        I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 14:06











      • Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
        – Adrien
        Sep 3 at 8:20














      up vote
      18
      down vote













      Europoid peoples actually do live in the subtropics. They always did



      There are lots and lots of Europoid (that is, for Americans, "Caucasian") people who live in the subtropics. Berbers, Arabs, Touaregs, Egyptians... They look like this:



      Zinedine ZidaneIbrahim Ag AlhabibMohammad bin Salman Al Saud



      Zinedine Zidane, a famous Frech footballer of Berber descent. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, a singer of Touareg descent. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al
      Saud of Arabia. Pictures from Wikipedia.



      The skin tone of Europoid people ranges from very light in Scandinavia to quite dark in Egypt and India. To the extent that human race has any biological meaning, Egyptians, Arabs and Persians are clearly the same race as Norwegians; they have the same skeletal and muscular structure, the same blood groups, the same kind of hair, suffer from the same diseases and react in the same way to medications.



      Which Europeans?



      There is very very little physical difference between Greeks, Spaniards and Italians on one hand, and Berbers, Arabs and Persians on the other. So it is quite obvious that by "Europeans" the question does not mean southern Europeans.



      So it must be some kind of central or northern Europeans, because otherwise the question does not make sense. Now, northen Europeans come into two varieties: most have skin which tans when exposed to sunlight; other have skin which burns which exposed to sunlight.



      For those whose skin tans when exposed to sunlight (most Englishmen, Frenchmen, Germans, about all central Europeans) they will change color in a matter of weeks. Fun factoid: in ancient Egyptian paintings it was conventional to depict women with a much lighter tone than men. Guess why.



      Amenemhet and His Wife Hemet



      The priest Amenemhet and his wife Hemet. Ancient Egyptian fresco, around 1800 or 1900 BCE. Note the difference in skin tone between the man and the woman. Reproduction from Wikipedia, public domain.



      Admixture admixture admixture



      One thousand years is a very long time to maintain ethnic purity; so long that it's guaranteed not to happen. All the people of European descent are related if we go back to our ancestors in the 10th century. We are all descendants of emperor Charlemagne; and we are all equally descendants of emperor Charlemagnes valet. In one thousand years the population will be thourougly admixed with the original inhabitants of the place.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 1




        Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:17






      • 1




        [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:19






      • 2




        @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
        – AlexP
        Sep 2 at 13:27







      • 2




        I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 14:06











      • Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
        – Adrien
        Sep 3 at 8:20












      up vote
      18
      down vote










      up vote
      18
      down vote









      Europoid peoples actually do live in the subtropics. They always did



      There are lots and lots of Europoid (that is, for Americans, "Caucasian") people who live in the subtropics. Berbers, Arabs, Touaregs, Egyptians... They look like this:



      Zinedine ZidaneIbrahim Ag AlhabibMohammad bin Salman Al Saud



      Zinedine Zidane, a famous Frech footballer of Berber descent. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, a singer of Touareg descent. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al
      Saud of Arabia. Pictures from Wikipedia.



      The skin tone of Europoid people ranges from very light in Scandinavia to quite dark in Egypt and India. To the extent that human race has any biological meaning, Egyptians, Arabs and Persians are clearly the same race as Norwegians; they have the same skeletal and muscular structure, the same blood groups, the same kind of hair, suffer from the same diseases and react in the same way to medications.



      Which Europeans?



      There is very very little physical difference between Greeks, Spaniards and Italians on one hand, and Berbers, Arabs and Persians on the other. So it is quite obvious that by "Europeans" the question does not mean southern Europeans.



      So it must be some kind of central or northern Europeans, because otherwise the question does not make sense. Now, northen Europeans come into two varieties: most have skin which tans when exposed to sunlight; other have skin which burns which exposed to sunlight.



      For those whose skin tans when exposed to sunlight (most Englishmen, Frenchmen, Germans, about all central Europeans) they will change color in a matter of weeks. Fun factoid: in ancient Egyptian paintings it was conventional to depict women with a much lighter tone than men. Guess why.



      Amenemhet and His Wife Hemet



      The priest Amenemhet and his wife Hemet. Ancient Egyptian fresco, around 1800 or 1900 BCE. Note the difference in skin tone between the man and the woman. Reproduction from Wikipedia, public domain.



      Admixture admixture admixture



      One thousand years is a very long time to maintain ethnic purity; so long that it's guaranteed not to happen. All the people of European descent are related if we go back to our ancestors in the 10th century. We are all descendants of emperor Charlemagne; and we are all equally descendants of emperor Charlemagnes valet. In one thousand years the population will be thourougly admixed with the original inhabitants of the place.






      share|improve this answer














      Europoid peoples actually do live in the subtropics. They always did



      There are lots and lots of Europoid (that is, for Americans, "Caucasian") people who live in the subtropics. Berbers, Arabs, Touaregs, Egyptians... They look like this:



      Zinedine ZidaneIbrahim Ag AlhabibMohammad bin Salman Al Saud



      Zinedine Zidane, a famous Frech footballer of Berber descent. Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, a singer of Touareg descent. Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al
      Saud of Arabia. Pictures from Wikipedia.



      The skin tone of Europoid people ranges from very light in Scandinavia to quite dark in Egypt and India. To the extent that human race has any biological meaning, Egyptians, Arabs and Persians are clearly the same race as Norwegians; they have the same skeletal and muscular structure, the same blood groups, the same kind of hair, suffer from the same diseases and react in the same way to medications.



      Which Europeans?



      There is very very little physical difference between Greeks, Spaniards and Italians on one hand, and Berbers, Arabs and Persians on the other. So it is quite obvious that by "Europeans" the question does not mean southern Europeans.



      So it must be some kind of central or northern Europeans, because otherwise the question does not make sense. Now, northen Europeans come into two varieties: most have skin which tans when exposed to sunlight; other have skin which burns which exposed to sunlight.



      For those whose skin tans when exposed to sunlight (most Englishmen, Frenchmen, Germans, about all central Europeans) they will change color in a matter of weeks. Fun factoid: in ancient Egyptian paintings it was conventional to depict women with a much lighter tone than men. Guess why.



      Amenemhet and His Wife Hemet



      The priest Amenemhet and his wife Hemet. Ancient Egyptian fresco, around 1800 or 1900 BCE. Note the difference in skin tone between the man and the woman. Reproduction from Wikipedia, public domain.



      Admixture admixture admixture



      One thousand years is a very long time to maintain ethnic purity; so long that it's guaranteed not to happen. All the people of European descent are related if we go back to our ancestors in the 10th century. We are all descendants of emperor Charlemagne; and we are all equally descendants of emperor Charlemagnes valet. In one thousand years the population will be thourougly admixed with the original inhabitants of the place.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Sep 2 at 15:28

























      answered Sep 2 at 12:57









      AlexP

      31.5k772122




      31.5k772122







      • 1




        Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:17






      • 1




        [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:19






      • 2




        @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
        – AlexP
        Sep 2 at 13:27







      • 2




        I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 14:06











      • Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
        – Adrien
        Sep 3 at 8:20












      • 1




        Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:17






      • 1




        [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 13:19






      • 2




        @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
        – AlexP
        Sep 2 at 13:27







      • 2




        I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
        – user49466
        Sep 2 at 14:06











      • Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
        – Adrien
        Sep 3 at 8:20







      1




      1




      Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 13:17




      Two things. One: Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color. Ethiopians are also considered caucasoid and most of the groups that you mentioned (e.g. berbers, egyptians, etc) have vast swathes of the population that are dark skinned. Secondly, while this these groups also have light skinned members, the complexion of most of these people has seriously lightened due to waves of invasions. Egypt, for example, experienced a number of waves that have significantly changed the skin tone of the average egyptian compared to what they generally looked like 10k years ago.
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 13:17




      1




      1




      [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 13:19




      [Cont] this is to say that while caucasoid peoples have always lived in the tropics, historically, most of them were dark skinned, and the relevant changes to heighten the phenotypic diversity weren't adaptation or genetic drift, etc, but human migration, warfare, and archaic colonization
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 13:19




      2




      2




      @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
      – AlexP
      Sep 2 at 13:27





      @user49466: "Caucasoid membership does not automatically imply skin color": that was the point, wasn't it? And then, there is very little subsaharan African blood in Persia... And anyway, admixture has worked both ways. Algerians and Tunisians have a significant Germanic ancestry -- remember the Vandals. Egyptians have a significant Greek ancestry. Both Algerians and Egyptians have lots of Arab blood.
      – AlexP
      Sep 2 at 13:27





      2




      2




      I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 14:06





      I think your "which europeans" edit does a good job of bringing out some of that complexity. Good research, m8 👍
      – user49466
      Sep 2 at 14:06













      Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
      – Adrien
      Sep 3 at 8:20




      Your average Berbers might be hardly different from your average Spaniard, but average Arabs or Persians will definitely stand out there. Of course there's a certain amount of overlap in the phenotypes, some Moroccans would blend in perfectly in Spain, and some Spaniards in Morocco.
      – Adrien
      Sep 3 at 8:20










      up vote
      15
      down vote













      (Note: 32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.)



      No, because clothes.



      Consider these three white men in the (very hot, very sunny!) Australian Outback. All are wearing wide brimmed hats, and two are wearing long-sleeved shirts. When the shirtless young guy gets sunburned once too often (after attracting a nubile young female by displaying how fit his genes are), he'll start wearing long-sleeved shirts, too.



      More importantly, as long as he passes on his DNA (and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle) before dying of skin cancer, there's no evolutionary pressure for darker skinned people.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


















      • 2




        If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
        – alamar
        Sep 3 at 9:14






      • 2




        @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
        – RonJohn
        Sep 3 at 11:29














      up vote
      15
      down vote













      (Note: 32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.)



      No, because clothes.



      Consider these three white men in the (very hot, very sunny!) Australian Outback. All are wearing wide brimmed hats, and two are wearing long-sleeved shirts. When the shirtless young guy gets sunburned once too often (after attracting a nubile young female by displaying how fit his genes are), he'll start wearing long-sleeved shirts, too.



      More importantly, as long as he passes on his DNA (and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle) before dying of skin cancer, there's no evolutionary pressure for darker skinned people.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


















      • 2




        If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
        – alamar
        Sep 3 at 9:14






      • 2




        @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
        – RonJohn
        Sep 3 at 11:29












      up vote
      15
      down vote










      up vote
      15
      down vote









      (Note: 32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.)



      No, because clothes.



      Consider these three white men in the (very hot, very sunny!) Australian Outback. All are wearing wide brimmed hats, and two are wearing long-sleeved shirts. When the shirtless young guy gets sunburned once too often (after attracting a nubile young female by displaying how fit his genes are), he'll start wearing long-sleeved shirts, too.



      More importantly, as long as he passes on his DNA (and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle) before dying of skin cancer, there's no evolutionary pressure for darker skinned people.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer














      (Note: 32°N cuts Texas in half, and 40°N is north central Missouri. It's also central Spain, central North Korea and northern Japan.)



      No, because clothes.



      Consider these three white men in the (very hot, very sunny!) Australian Outback. All are wearing wide brimmed hats, and two are wearing long-sleeved shirts. When the shirtless young guy gets sunburned once too often (after attracting a nubile young female by displaying how fit his genes are), he'll start wearing long-sleeved shirts, too.



      More importantly, as long as he passes on his DNA (and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle) before dying of skin cancer, there's no evolutionary pressure for darker skinned people.



      enter image description here







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Sep 3 at 6:35

























      answered Sep 2 at 21:40









      RonJohn

      11.5k12657




      11.5k12657







      • 2




        If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
        – alamar
        Sep 3 at 9:14






      • 2




        @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
        – RonJohn
        Sep 3 at 11:29












      • 2




        If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
        – alamar
        Sep 3 at 9:14






      • 2




        @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
        – RonJohn
        Sep 3 at 11:29







      2




      2




      If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
      – alamar
      Sep 3 at 9:14




      If he dies before raising his children to adulthood, this is deleterious to their survivability. Of course, barring welfare state.
      – alamar
      Sep 3 at 9:14




      2




      2




      @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
      – RonJohn
      Sep 3 at 11:29




      @alamar I mentioned that in the answer: "and providing for the mothers of his children, so that his children survive until adulthood so that they can repeat the cycle".
      – RonJohn
      Sep 3 at 11:29










      up vote
      6
      down vote













      Boers in South Africa are some of the whitest people on earth because their ancestors came from northern Europe. They've been in South Africa for 400 years with no sign of being darker than the people they descended from. People with mixed ancestry aside.



      There are pale skinned redheads in hot arid parts of the Middle East. Descendants of ancient populations or at least medieval ones so again several hundred years and still their original colour minus mixing with other groups.



      If pigmentation is due to the environment then it was established long before clothes were the norm and clothes were being worn 6000 years ago at least.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        6
        down vote













        Boers in South Africa are some of the whitest people on earth because their ancestors came from northern Europe. They've been in South Africa for 400 years with no sign of being darker than the people they descended from. People with mixed ancestry aside.



        There are pale skinned redheads in hot arid parts of the Middle East. Descendants of ancient populations or at least medieval ones so again several hundred years and still their original colour minus mixing with other groups.



        If pigmentation is due to the environment then it was established long before clothes were the norm and clothes were being worn 6000 years ago at least.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          6
          down vote










          up vote
          6
          down vote









          Boers in South Africa are some of the whitest people on earth because their ancestors came from northern Europe. They've been in South Africa for 400 years with no sign of being darker than the people they descended from. People with mixed ancestry aside.



          There are pale skinned redheads in hot arid parts of the Middle East. Descendants of ancient populations or at least medieval ones so again several hundred years and still their original colour minus mixing with other groups.



          If pigmentation is due to the environment then it was established long before clothes were the norm and clothes were being worn 6000 years ago at least.






          share|improve this answer












          Boers in South Africa are some of the whitest people on earth because their ancestors came from northern Europe. They've been in South Africa for 400 years with no sign of being darker than the people they descended from. People with mixed ancestry aside.



          There are pale skinned redheads in hot arid parts of the Middle East. Descendants of ancient populations or at least medieval ones so again several hundred years and still their original colour minus mixing with other groups.



          If pigmentation is due to the environment then it was established long before clothes were the norm and clothes were being worn 6000 years ago at least.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Sep 3 at 2:31









          Daniel

          2305




          2305




















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              If you're talking about the actual Argentina, and not just using it as an example for the climate you're looking for, I think it hardly matters what nature would have done.



              Argentina is currently populated mostly by Caucasian people, which wouldn't make sense given the skin color of the native inhabitants of South America as a whole and the territory currently called Argentina in particular. The real reason is that non-European people were slowly eradicated in several wars like President Roca's Conquest of the Desert (Conquista del Desierto in Spanish) and the war with Paraguay, or they were systematically marginalized by their skin color and/or native origin.



              Given how real history turned out, I believe that a colonization war lasting from the X century to the beginning of the XIX century* would result in an even more extended and thorough culling of non-Caucasian or non-European people than what we can see today.



              *Moving the colonization of the New Continent from the XV century to the X century would probably not change the independence date by much, or at least it shouldn't make it happen any sooner, considering that Argentina's independence was part of the independence movement triggered in the whole continent by the fall of the Bastille.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                If you're talking about the actual Argentina, and not just using it as an example for the climate you're looking for, I think it hardly matters what nature would have done.



                Argentina is currently populated mostly by Caucasian people, which wouldn't make sense given the skin color of the native inhabitants of South America as a whole and the territory currently called Argentina in particular. The real reason is that non-European people were slowly eradicated in several wars like President Roca's Conquest of the Desert (Conquista del Desierto in Spanish) and the war with Paraguay, or they were systematically marginalized by their skin color and/or native origin.



                Given how real history turned out, I believe that a colonization war lasting from the X century to the beginning of the XIX century* would result in an even more extended and thorough culling of non-Caucasian or non-European people than what we can see today.



                *Moving the colonization of the New Continent from the XV century to the X century would probably not change the independence date by much, or at least it shouldn't make it happen any sooner, considering that Argentina's independence was part of the independence movement triggered in the whole continent by the fall of the Bastille.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  If you're talking about the actual Argentina, and not just using it as an example for the climate you're looking for, I think it hardly matters what nature would have done.



                  Argentina is currently populated mostly by Caucasian people, which wouldn't make sense given the skin color of the native inhabitants of South America as a whole and the territory currently called Argentina in particular. The real reason is that non-European people were slowly eradicated in several wars like President Roca's Conquest of the Desert (Conquista del Desierto in Spanish) and the war with Paraguay, or they were systematically marginalized by their skin color and/or native origin.



                  Given how real history turned out, I believe that a colonization war lasting from the X century to the beginning of the XIX century* would result in an even more extended and thorough culling of non-Caucasian or non-European people than what we can see today.



                  *Moving the colonization of the New Continent from the XV century to the X century would probably not change the independence date by much, or at least it shouldn't make it happen any sooner, considering that Argentina's independence was part of the independence movement triggered in the whole continent by the fall of the Bastille.






                  share|improve this answer












                  If you're talking about the actual Argentina, and not just using it as an example for the climate you're looking for, I think it hardly matters what nature would have done.



                  Argentina is currently populated mostly by Caucasian people, which wouldn't make sense given the skin color of the native inhabitants of South America as a whole and the territory currently called Argentina in particular. The real reason is that non-European people were slowly eradicated in several wars like President Roca's Conquest of the Desert (Conquista del Desierto in Spanish) and the war with Paraguay, or they were systematically marginalized by their skin color and/or native origin.



                  Given how real history turned out, I believe that a colonization war lasting from the X century to the beginning of the XIX century* would result in an even more extended and thorough culling of non-Caucasian or non-European people than what we can see today.



                  *Moving the colonization of the New Continent from the XV century to the X century would probably not change the independence date by much, or at least it shouldn't make it happen any sooner, considering that Argentina's independence was part of the independence movement triggered in the whole continent by the fall of the Bastille.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 3 at 20:50









                  Blueriver

                  1012




                  1012




















                      up vote
                      -3
                      down vote













                      Ask Mexicans. Or anyone in South America. Basically mildly brownish tint.






                      share|improve this answer




















                      • Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                        – Blueriver
                        Sep 3 at 20:50










                      • @Blueriver good point
                        – Jack Shephard
                        Sep 4 at 0:06














                      up vote
                      -3
                      down vote













                      Ask Mexicans. Or anyone in South America. Basically mildly brownish tint.






                      share|improve this answer




















                      • Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                        – Blueriver
                        Sep 3 at 20:50










                      • @Blueriver good point
                        – Jack Shephard
                        Sep 4 at 0:06












                      up vote
                      -3
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      -3
                      down vote









                      Ask Mexicans. Or anyone in South America. Basically mildly brownish tint.






                      share|improve this answer












                      Ask Mexicans. Or anyone in South America. Basically mildly brownish tint.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Sep 2 at 21:29









                      Jack Shephard

                      1




                      1











                      • Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                        – Blueriver
                        Sep 3 at 20:50










                      • @Blueriver good point
                        – Jack Shephard
                        Sep 4 at 0:06
















                      • Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                        – Blueriver
                        Sep 3 at 20:50










                      • @Blueriver good point
                        – Jack Shephard
                        Sep 4 at 0:06















                      Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                      – Blueriver
                      Sep 3 at 20:50




                      Argentinian here, not many mildly brownish people around.
                      – Blueriver
                      Sep 3 at 20:50












                      @Blueriver good point
                      – Jack Shephard
                      Sep 4 at 0:06




                      @Blueriver good point
                      – Jack Shephard
                      Sep 4 at 0:06

















                       

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