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Posted by on Feb 12, 2018 in TellMeWhy |

What Makes People from Different Parts of the World Have Different Skin Colors?

What Makes People from Different Parts of the World Have Different Skin Colors?

What Makes People from Different Parts of the World Have Different Skin Colors? People noticed long ago that people from different parts of the world often had different skin colors. For example, people who lived in the tropics usually had darker skin than people who lived in colder climates. Of course, in today’s modern world of international travel, people of all races, ethnicities, and nationalities travel and live all over the globe.

Their individual bodies adapt to conditions where they live over time, and they pass on these traits to their children, which helps explain the myriad skin tones we see all around us every day. But it’s not always the case! Even people of the same race, ethnicity, and nationality can have different shades of skin colors.

Over time, scientists who studied the human body learned that variations in skin color appeared to be adaptive traits that were passed through genes from parents to children. These traits corresponded closely with geography and the Sun’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

ultraviolet radiation senstivity

A person’s skin color is determined by the amount of melaninin his or her skin. Melanin is a dark brown to black pigment produced by special cells called melanocytes. Melanin’s purpose is to protect the skin from the Sun’s harmful UV rays. Ultraviolet radiation can cause skin cancer. Melanin acts as a natural sunscreen by absorbing these UV rays. The more melanin your skin has, the darker your skin will be and the more protection it will have against UV rays.

People with light skin have just a little melanin. People with darker skin have more melanin. People with yellow skin tones have more or another type of pigment called carotene. People who live in the tropics are exposed to more of the Sun’s harmful UV radiation.

As a result, their skin tends to become darker as the body produces more melanin to counteract the effects of the Sun’s rays. Over successive generations, genes are passed down from parents to their children, including the tendency to produce a certain amount of melanin given the area where they live.

Likewise, northern peoples tend to have lighter skin colors, because they don’t receive as many of the Sun’s harmful UV rays. As a result, their bodies do not need to produce as much melanin, which makes their skin color lighter.

vitamin d

Also, lighter skin tones in northern areas allow more UV rays to penetrate the skin to help produce the essential amounts of vitamin D that the body needs. The body must always strike a careful balance to make sure it receives just enough UV radiation to make essential vitamin D, while avoiding overexposure that can lead to skin cancer.

For example, in some northern coastal areas, such as Alaska and Canada, you’ll notice that native peoples tend to have darker skin than you might otherwise expect. This is usually because they eat a diet rich in seafood that provides all the vitamin D their bodies need. As a result, their skin produces more melanin, which makes it darker.

Content for this question contributed by Ella Santoyo, resident of Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, USA