bg370 t1_itv38jx wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Vitamin D deficiency linked to premature death. Over a 14-year follow up period, researchers found that the risk for death significantly decreased with increased vitamin D concentrations, with the strongest effects seen among those with severe deficiencies. by Wagamaga
Huge numbers of people died from vitamin D deficiency, often during childbirth. As Africans moved into Europe the darkest ones died and the lightest ones lived because of too little vitamin D. Eventually we got white people. Once they hit Scandinavia they went kinda albino in order to get enough sun - blonde hair and blue eyes.
FreydisTit t1_itwh2by wrote
Just to add, the mesolithic hunter gatherers of Scandinavia and Europe had dark skin for around 40k years or more after their migration out of Africa. There wasn't a need for them to adapt their melanin to colder climates because they ate a diet rich in vitamin D3, creating a shortcut that doesn't require sun exposure. They consumed fish, the livers of large mammals, and mushrooms. They were also lactose intolerant like their African ancestors. They did have the mutations for light eyes.
It wasn't until migrations to the area during the neolithic period that farming was introduced to this area, and hunter gatherers lived with farming societies for a thousand years or so before the complete adoption of agriculture. These migrations, along with climate change, the loss of hunter gatherer diet, genetic mutations for lactose tolerance, mutations regarding immunity, and sexual selection, led to lighter skin, which just happened in the last 4k years or so. Archeological evidence coupled with DNA show that vitamin D deficiency did become a problem during this transition.
I'm glad you brought up vitamin D deficiency, because it is really a problem, especially for those with darker skin near the equator. They have fewer natural sources of D3, and some cultural and religious practices in these areas lead to women, who need Vitamin D the most for bone health because of estrogen, to suffer from vitamin D deficiency in the highest numbers. The children in these areas are disproportionately affected as well.
bg370 t1_itxw46r wrote
Thank you for the write up
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