Once humans have the capability to clone and bring to life digitised genomes do you think we’ll ever get to the stage that our species will send robot craft to colonizable terrains in outer space and set up Earth ecologies out there?
Could the last remaining populations of Neanderthals have contributed to a greater extent to the genome of the human populations that exist in the same areas they inhabited? The more time for interbreeding to occur might have led to a greater regional contribution. Have any studies been done on this?
Not just a pretty face then.
ReplyDeleteOnce humans have the capability to clone and bring to life digitised genomes do you think we’ll ever get to the stage that our species will send robot craft to colonizable terrains in outer space and set up Earth ecologies out there?
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ReplyDeleteCould the last remaining populations of Neanderthals have contributed to a greater extent to the genome of the human populations that exist in the same areas they inhabited? The more time for interbreeding to occur might have led to a greater regional contribution. Have any studies been done on this?
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