• @[email protected]
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      1126 days ago

      If we start pulling at this thread people will start wondering why Wheel of Time had a bunch of pale redheads in the desert.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        To be fair, the Aiel didn’t initially grow up there (and too short for evolution, in my non-scientific brain), but rather migrated there to use it as “a shaping stone to make them, a testing ground to prove their worth, and a punishment for their sin.” And it would be too easy on those three reasons if they were perfectly (or mostly) acclimated and suited for the desert genetically.

        • @[email protected]
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          626 days ago

          You’re right, and it’s only been a few thousand years. I’ll still complain to anyone who will listen. If I don’t complain how will you know I really enjoy the series?

        • @[email protected]
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          225 days ago

          IIRC, it takes around 100 generations to see a significant shift in skin pigmentation due to evolution. For humans, that would work out to about 1700 years for people that were moved from the Nordic regions to sub-Saharan Africa to develop dark skins (assuming that there were no other factors in play).

          Evolution can take what seems like a really long time.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 days ago

      No, because they didn’t use to live underground. Given enough time they’d all presumably become pale.

    • @[email protected]
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      425 days ago

      I might be misremembering things but weren’t they dark skinned already on surface, before they were expelled?

    • @brown567
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      325 days ago

      In my homebrew world, elves have a different skin pigment that reflects UV light (whereas melanin absorbs it). Lower amounts of pigmentation mean darker skin, and more means whiter skin

      Because of this, deep elves aren’t as dark skinned as some humans, with the darkest being an ashy charcoal gray, but desert elves develop extremely white skin with almost no translucence