Tuesday, June 3, 2014

SUPER COLD!








BEING COLD STINKS!
Extremely cold temperatures in fact do negatively impact the survival of human beings. Temperatures being extremely cold allow the body to be exposed to hypothermia, frost-bite, and death. Hypothermia can be caused by drinking alcohol. Drinking alcohol makes a person feel as if they are warmer but it is not a permanent feeling. The alcohol that the person drinks can be dangerous and lead to hypothermia because it can allow the body to lose heat faster. A facultative adaptation would be when the body needs to retain heat in order to maintain life it can begin the "narrowing of blood vessels near skin surface (vasoconstriction). When this happens the skin becomes colder and there is more heat retained than before.  Shivering is a short term adaptation that allows the body to retain heat and survive extreme cold conditions. There have also been many cultural adaptations that have helped human beings survive such cold weather. In some places families sleep together to keep warm or they wear appropriate clothing for cold weather. Others have had a custom to eat "high calorie fatty foods" that allow their bodies to make more heat for themselves. The developmental adaptations that human beings have had in order to be able to live in extreme conditions would be the developing of what is said is a "thick fat insulation" that is around the organs that are needed the most in our bodies.
The many benefits of studying human variation across environmental clines are that we are able
to study how the human body is able to adapt both culturally and physiologically to the extreme conditions it is placed in. In that way we are able to learn what we should and should not do when we are under weather that is not suitable for human bodies. It can also be informing to be able to know the extreme points that the body is able to handle and what it is not able to handle. It can also be informing to know what the body can withstand under the consumption of certain foods to let humans know what to eat depending where they are. It also could be very useful to know what dangers a person is prone to under harsh conditions to be able to take care of themselves instead of not knowing and making a mistake that could be fatal.
To be completely honest I would not know how to use race to understand variation but to the knowledge that I have here I go... It might possibly be the pale skin tone that people have in order to retain vitamin d in much colder places because they need the vitamins and it causes them to be that skin tone, same as in which in much hotter areas where there is more radiation of the sun the race may be more of darker skin because that is what they need in order to survive.  The study of environmental differences is a better way to understand human variation than race because race is a term created by society that discriminates a certain group of people that has the same sort of characteristics, and that is where inequality and freedom come into the equation. Society has dedicated itself to distinguish people by the way their features are and categorize them instead of looking at their characteristics as needs for survival that are passed down from generation to generation. Studying environmental influences allows us to picture and learn where the characteristics came from and why they have been passed on. Why they were needed in the people that have obtained those features over the years and how it has helped them adapt.