Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Light_skin> ?p ?o }
- Light_skin abstract "Light skin is a naturally occurring human skin color which has little eumelanin pigmentation and which has been adapted to environments of low UV radiation. Light skin is most commonly found amongst people of Europe and East Asia. People with light skin pigmentation are often referred to as white or yellow, although these usages can be ambiguous in some countries where it is used to refer specifically to certain ethnic groups or populations.It has been hypothesized that dark skin pigmentation was the original condition for the genus Homo, including Homo sapiens. However, as populations migrated away from the tropics between 125,000 and 65,000 years ago into areas of low UV radiation, they developed light skin pigmentation as an evolutionary selection acting against vitamin D depletion. Based on ancient DNA analysis conducted in 2014 on human skeletal remains from western Europe, this change from dark to light skin pigmentation likely occurred only recently for at least some Europeans. Paleogenomics researcher Carles Lalueza-Fox of the Pompeu Fabra University in Spain and his colleagues observed that a 7,000 year old hunter-gatherer from the La Braña-Arintero labyrinthine cave in the Cantabrian Mountains possessed the allele for blue eyes but not the European mutations for lighter skin pigmentation.Humans with light skin pigmentation have skin with low amounts of eumelanin, and possess fewer melanosomes than humans with dark skin pigmentation. Light skin provides better absorption qualities of ultraviolet radiation. This helps the body to synthesize higher amounts of vitamin D for bodily processes such as calcium development.Light-skinned people who live near the equator with high sunlight are at an increased risk of folate depletion. As consequence of folate depletion, they are at a higher risk of DNA damage, birth defects, and numerous types of cancers, especially skin cancer.The distribution of indigenous light-skinned populations is highly correlated with the low ultraviolet radiation levels of the regions inhabited by them. Historically, light-skinned indigenous populations almost exclusively lived far from the equator in high latitude areas with low sunlight intensity; for example, in Canada, Mongolia, Russia, Scandinavia, and Northern, Western, Southern and Eastern Europe. Due to mass migration and increased mobility of people between geographical regions in recent centuries, light-skinned populations today are found all over the world, even in tropical climates.".
- Light_skin thumbnail Little_girl_in_kindergarten_uniform_of_Japan.jpg?width=300.
- Light_skin wikiPageID "15177796".
- Light_skin wikiPageLength "40998".
- Light_skin wikiPageOutDegree "167".
- Light_skin wikiPageRevisionID "678946546".
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Albinism.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Amino_acid.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_DNA.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Anger.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_Peninsula.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Arabs.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Archaeogenetics.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Arteriole.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Assortative_mating.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Assortive_mating.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Assyrian_people.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Assyrians.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Basal-cell_carcinoma.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Basal_cell_carcinoma.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Birth_defect.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Blood.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Breast_cancer.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Canada.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Cancer.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Cantabrian_Mountains.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Capillaries.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Capillary.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Skin_pigmentation.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Cathelicidin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Central_Asia.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Cholecalciferol.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Cline_(biology).
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Colon_cancer.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Colorectal_cancer.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Congenital_disorder.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Connective_tissue.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink DNA.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink DNA_damage.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink DNA_repair.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink DNA_replication.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Dark_skin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Dermis.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink East_Asia.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Europe.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Embarrassment.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Embryo.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Embryogenesis.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Epidermis.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Epidermis_(skin).
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Eumelanin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Evolutionary_pressure.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Evolutionary_selection.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Fat.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Fitzpatrick_scale.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Flu.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Folate.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Folate_deficiency.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Folic_acid.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Freckle.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Freckling.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Frostbite.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Genetic_mutation.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Genus.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Haemoglobin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Hemoglobin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink High_latitude.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Himachal_Pradesh.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Homo.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Homo_sapiens.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Horn_of_Africa.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Human_evolution.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Human_skin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Human_skin_color.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Indian_Subcontinent.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Indian_subcontinent.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Indigenous_peoples.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Indo-Aryan.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Infection.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Influenza.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Inuit.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Jews.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Kashmiris.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Keratinocyte.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Kurds.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Lentigines.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Lentigo.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Levant.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Loss-of-function.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Mass_migration.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Megaloblastic_anemia.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Melanin.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Melanocyte.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Melanosome.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Menopause.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Middle_East.
- Light_skin wikiPageWikiLink Miscarriage.