Why did eyes mutate to blue?

"What we're seeing with blue eye colour is a lack of melanin in the outer layer of the iris." A variation in the HERC2 gene, which sits right next to the OCA2 gene controls whether melanin is produced in the outer layer of the iris. "It's like turning a light switch on or off.
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Are blue eyes a mutation caused by inbreeding?

blue eyes descend from a single genetic mutation means that every single person on the planet with blue eyes descended from one common ancestor. In fact, a team of geneticists at the University of Copenhagen actually traced that mutation all the way back to a single Danish family.
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Are people with blue eyes a mutation?

People with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor, according to new research. A team of scientists has tracked down a genetic mutation that leads to blue eyes. The mutation occurred between 6,000 and 10,000 years ago. Before then, there were no blue eyes.
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What type of mutation is blue eyes?

Blue eye color in humans may be caused by a perfectly associated founder mutation in a regulatory element located within the HERC2 gene inhibiting OCA2 expression.
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Why did blue eyes survive?

Light Skin Advantage with Bonus Blue Eyes

Another possibility is that blue eyes didn't spread because they had any advantage. Instead they spread because they were a side effect of something that was an advantage—light skin. Back before fortified milk and vitamin supplements, we got most of our vitamin D from the sun.
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How Did Blue Eyes Evolve?



What is the rarest eye color?

Of those four, green is the rarest. It shows up in about 9% of Americans but only 2% of the world's population. Hazel/amber is the next rarest of these. Blue is the second most common and brown tops the list with 45% of the U.S. population and possibly almost 80% worldwide.
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Who was the first blue eyed person?

A Stone Age man who lived about 7,000 years ago and whose buried bones were discovered in 2006 has turned out to be the earliest known person with blue eyes, a physical trait that evolved relatively recently in human history, a study has found.
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Why do brown eyes turn blue?

Blue rings around the iris are caused by cholesterol deposits in the eye. The deposits are actually white or yellowish but can appear blue. This might sound dangerous, but it isn't. Researchers estimate that this condition impacts anywhere between 20 and 35 percent of people, becoming increasingly likely as you age.
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Did Vikings have blue eyes?

Blue eyes were very common among Northern Vikings, while brown eyes were more common in the Viking settlements of England, Ireland, and mainland Europe. In modern times, most people who claim to be of Viking descent have blonde hair and blue eyes, but that doesn't mean that all Vikings shared this appearance.
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Who is the common ancestor for blue eyes?

All blue-eyed people have one ancestor in common, born around 6,000 to 10,000 years ago. Blue eyes are caused by a gene mutation. For years, researchers had searched for it on the OCA2 gene. The OCA2 gene determines how much brown pigment is in our eyes.
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How was blue eyes created?

Scientists have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6,000-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today. New research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor.
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Are blue eyes dying out?

Even though they will become rarer and rarer, the genes that cause blue eyes will never disappear from the human genome, but will simply be covered up, waiting to come out of hiding, waiting for the right two people to meet, or a genetic mutation to occur and allow the blue eyes to shine again.
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Did Neanderthals have blue eyes?

Fair skin, hair and eyes : Neanderthals are believed to have had blue or green eyes, as well as fair skin and light hair. Having spent 300,000 years in northern latitudes, five times longer than Homo sapiens, it is only natural that Neanderthals should have developed these adaptive traits first.
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Do people with blue eyes have a higher alcohol tolerance?

According to several recent studies, eye color is a pretty good indicator of alcohol tolerance (along with pain tolerance, risk for diabetes, and hand-eye coordination). Congratulations, blue eyed drinkers, you can hold your liquor better than your dark eyed peers.
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Can a child have blue eyes if parents don t?

Predicting Your Baby's Eyes

So really, any combination can result in a blue-eyed child, but only if there is blue eyes somewhere in one of the parents' ancestral lines. This is rare so blue eyes remain rare. But, if both parents have blue eyes or green eyes, the odds are a lot higher.
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Are blue eyes really an indication of inbreeding?

However, the gene for blue eyes is recessive so you'll need both of them to get blue eyes. This is important as certain congenital defects and genetic diseases, such as cystic fibrosis, are carried by recessive alleles. Inbreeding stacks the odds of being born with such conditions against you.
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How common is Viking DNA?

The genetic legacy of the Viking Age lives on today with six percent of people of the UK population predicted to have Viking DNA in their genes compared to 10 percent in Sweden. Professor Willerslev concluded: “The results change the perception of who a Viking actually was. The history books will need to be updated.”
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What ethnicity has blonde hair and blue eyes?

The ethnic Miao people of Guizhou province from China, a subgroup of Hmong people, have been described as having blue eyes and blonde hair.
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What nationality do blue eyes come from?

Scientists concluded that every blue-eyed person on the world today can trace their ancestry back to a single European who probably lived about 10,000 years ago in the Black Sea region and who first developed a specific mutation that accounts for the now widespread iris coloration.
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Where do grey eyes come from?

Gray. Close to 3% of the world's population have gray eyes. People with gray eyes have little or no melanin in their irises, but they have more collagen in a part of the eye called the stroma. The light scatters off the collagen in a way that makes the eyes appear gray.
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Why are my eyes turning grey?

Cataracts – A cloudiness on the lens of your eye (behind the pupil) that can appear grey in color. Cataracts are common as you age and are often removed through surgery. Injury or trauma – When the eye is injured, the iris can be damaged and make your eye color appear changed.
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Why are green eyes so rare?

Iris color is determined by our parents' eye colors mixed with a little genetic lottery. Green irises have an uncommon melanin level — less than “truly” brown eyes, but more than blue eyes. This is why green eyes are so unique.
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Can 2 blue eyed parents have a brown eyed child?

This has to do with the fact that blue eyes are supposed to be recessive to brown eyes. This means that if a parent has a brown eye gene, then that parent will have brown eyes. Which makes it impossible for two blue-eyed parents to have a brown-eyed child -- they don't have a brown eye gene to pass on!
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Can blue eyes see better in the dark?

While blue eyes are more sensitive to light during the day, people with blue eyes tend to see better at night – unless there are bright lights. In that case, the lack of melanin makes them as sensitive to light at night as they are during the day.
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How did Europeans get blue eyes?

"The mutations responsible for blue eye colour most likely originate from the north-west part of the Black Sea region, where the great agricultural migration of the northern part of Europe took place in the Neolithic periods about 6,000 to 10,000 years ago," the researchers report in the journal Human Genetics.
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