Could the Bunker Dwellers become noticeably different from Wastelanders?
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So, in my world, there are a group of people, mostly unknown to the rest of the world, who took shelter from the apocalypse 90 years ago in great underground bunkers.
Compared to the rest of the Wasteland, they live in a utopia (except for all the xenophobia, fascism, and euthanasia). They have access to clean water, plentiful food, and so on. Basically, they live a modern style of life, while the rest of the world has returned to early 19th century.
So, my question is, considering their lifestyle, would the Bunker Dwellers have any noticeable genetic differences to Wastelanders, after 3-4 generations underground?
reality-check post-apocalypse genetics
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
So, in my world, there are a group of people, mostly unknown to the rest of the world, who took shelter from the apocalypse 90 years ago in great underground bunkers.
Compared to the rest of the Wasteland, they live in a utopia (except for all the xenophobia, fascism, and euthanasia). They have access to clean water, plentiful food, and so on. Basically, they live a modern style of life, while the rest of the world has returned to early 19th century.
So, my question is, considering their lifestyle, would the Bunker Dwellers have any noticeable genetic differences to Wastelanders, after 3-4 generations underground?
reality-check post-apocalypse genetics
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
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– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
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@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
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– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
4
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
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– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
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Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26
add a comment |
$begingroup$
So, in my world, there are a group of people, mostly unknown to the rest of the world, who took shelter from the apocalypse 90 years ago in great underground bunkers.
Compared to the rest of the Wasteland, they live in a utopia (except for all the xenophobia, fascism, and euthanasia). They have access to clean water, plentiful food, and so on. Basically, they live a modern style of life, while the rest of the world has returned to early 19th century.
So, my question is, considering their lifestyle, would the Bunker Dwellers have any noticeable genetic differences to Wastelanders, after 3-4 generations underground?
reality-check post-apocalypse genetics
$endgroup$
So, in my world, there are a group of people, mostly unknown to the rest of the world, who took shelter from the apocalypse 90 years ago in great underground bunkers.
Compared to the rest of the Wasteland, they live in a utopia (except for all the xenophobia, fascism, and euthanasia). They have access to clean water, plentiful food, and so on. Basically, they live a modern style of life, while the rest of the world has returned to early 19th century.
So, my question is, considering their lifestyle, would the Bunker Dwellers have any noticeable genetic differences to Wastelanders, after 3-4 generations underground?
reality-check post-apocalypse genetics
reality-check post-apocalypse genetics
edited Jan 31 at 5:15
L.Dutch♦
84.8k28201415
84.8k28201415
asked Jan 31 at 4:51
Robert PaulRobert Paul
2,36471846
2,36471846
1
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
$endgroup$
– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
$begingroup$
@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
4
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
$endgroup$
– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
$begingroup$
Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
$endgroup$
– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
$begingroup$
@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
4
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
$endgroup$
– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
$begingroup$
Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26
1
1
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
$endgroup$
– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
$endgroup$
– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
$begingroup$
@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
$begingroup$
@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
4
4
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
$endgroup$
– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
$endgroup$
– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
$begingroup$
Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Genetic no.....
Physical yes. Ample food, modern healthcare and clean water means they would be healthier, taller and good teeth. Skin would be paler and less blemishes.
A child's access to health and nutrition greatly impacts on height, strength and intelligence later in life.
Genetic changes are only really likely if the vault dwellers use genetic engineering to improve themselves or wasteland dwellers suffer from radiation caused diseases.
$endgroup$
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
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– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
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@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
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– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
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– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
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– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
|
show 6 more comments
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3-4 generations are not enough to establish noticeable differences between populations.
The only noticeable differences will come from the different diets: those with a richer diet will grow better (taller, bigger), while the other will necessarily reflect the much poorer diet.
For a visual reference, you can look at the famous Robert Capa's photo of a Sicilian farmer and an American soldier during WWII:
You can clearly perceive the difference in size between the well fed American soldier and the farmer. Something similar would be present in your case between the two groups.
But it won't be based on genetic differences.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are likely to be genetic differences, but ones that were present at the time the groups split.
Who had access to the bunkers? I'm sure it was not random luck.
The other differences will be that people with a variety of disabilities and health conditions (which may or may not be genetic) are more likely to die off if they are in the wasteland. Since most such conditions are genetic only in terms of how likely you are to get the condition, this will probably not affect the actual genetics. Yet.
For example, there aren't going to be a lot of wastelanders with conditions that affect their stamina (running away from danger), eyesight, or mobility, for example, a heart condition that shows up under physical stress. But the genetics involve multiple alleles throughout the genome (not a single inherited SNP) so it is way too early for this "natural selection" to change the gene pool in any significant way.
Though even one generation can change epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation. It does not change the actual DNA but markers are inherited to a degree. Something like famine can affect generations that never experienced it.
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add a comment |
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None. None at all.
90 years? Unless life in the wastelands is unbelievably hard, you have a better-than-average chance of someone still being alive in the wasteland who was there (even if they couldn't remember) when the bunker was closed.
How much genetic difference do you have with your grandfather? Or, at very worst, your great grandfather?
None, of course.
@L.Dutch is right, the environment could bring some differences, but even that wouldn't be horrible. Give the wastelanders a bath, dress them in Fallout Bunker clothes and other than their tan and possibly and accent, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between them.
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Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
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– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
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Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
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– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
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Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
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– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
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Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
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– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
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@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Genetic no.....
Physical yes. Ample food, modern healthcare and clean water means they would be healthier, taller and good teeth. Skin would be paler and less blemishes.
A child's access to health and nutrition greatly impacts on height, strength and intelligence later in life.
Genetic changes are only really likely if the vault dwellers use genetic engineering to improve themselves or wasteland dwellers suffer from radiation caused diseases.
$endgroup$
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
|
show 6 more comments
$begingroup$
Genetic no.....
Physical yes. Ample food, modern healthcare and clean water means they would be healthier, taller and good teeth. Skin would be paler and less blemishes.
A child's access to health and nutrition greatly impacts on height, strength and intelligence later in life.
Genetic changes are only really likely if the vault dwellers use genetic engineering to improve themselves or wasteland dwellers suffer from radiation caused diseases.
$endgroup$
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
|
show 6 more comments
$begingroup$
Genetic no.....
Physical yes. Ample food, modern healthcare and clean water means they would be healthier, taller and good teeth. Skin would be paler and less blemishes.
A child's access to health and nutrition greatly impacts on height, strength and intelligence later in life.
Genetic changes are only really likely if the vault dwellers use genetic engineering to improve themselves or wasteland dwellers suffer from radiation caused diseases.
$endgroup$
Genetic no.....
Physical yes. Ample food, modern healthcare and clean water means they would be healthier, taller and good teeth. Skin would be paler and less blemishes.
A child's access to health and nutrition greatly impacts on height, strength and intelligence later in life.
Genetic changes are only really likely if the vault dwellers use genetic engineering to improve themselves or wasteland dwellers suffer from radiation caused diseases.
answered Jan 31 at 5:54
ThorneThorne
15.7k42249
15.7k42249
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
|
show 6 more comments
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
4
4
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul No. I actually upvoted this answer becuse it pointed out the most important difference you totally would see.
$endgroup$
– Ville Niemi
Jan 31 at 5:58
2
2
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
$begingroup$
@VilleNiemi it's not a phenotype/genotype thing, it's epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can also carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation.
$endgroup$
– Cyn
Jan 31 at 6:48
3
3
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
$begingroup$
@Robert if I live in a violent area and so lead a violent life and keep getting injured I will be covered in scars. However any children I have will not have those scars. Some physical differences are caused by genetics, some are caused by enviroment
$endgroup$
– Richard Tingle
Jan 31 at 7:22
1
1
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
$begingroup$
What if you have very high selective pressure? For example what if the regime kills all people with certain attributes? Or what if fatal diseases like HIV are rampant which only a few people are immune against? Wouldn’t that alter the gene pool noticeably within a short time frame?
$endgroup$
– Michael
Jan 31 at 11:16
1
1
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
$begingroup$
1. By access to healthcare, clean water etc. bunker dwellers are removed from natural selection pressure in these aspects. 2. By eugenic euthanasia bunker dwellers may be under artificial selection pressure. 3. Bunker dwellers experienced the bottleneck effect.
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:24
|
show 6 more comments
$begingroup$
3-4 generations are not enough to establish noticeable differences between populations.
The only noticeable differences will come from the different diets: those with a richer diet will grow better (taller, bigger), while the other will necessarily reflect the much poorer diet.
For a visual reference, you can look at the famous Robert Capa's photo of a Sicilian farmer and an American soldier during WWII:
You can clearly perceive the difference in size between the well fed American soldier and the farmer. Something similar would be present in your case between the two groups.
But it won't be based on genetic differences.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
3-4 generations are not enough to establish noticeable differences between populations.
The only noticeable differences will come from the different diets: those with a richer diet will grow better (taller, bigger), while the other will necessarily reflect the much poorer diet.
For a visual reference, you can look at the famous Robert Capa's photo of a Sicilian farmer and an American soldier during WWII:
You can clearly perceive the difference in size between the well fed American soldier and the farmer. Something similar would be present in your case between the two groups.
But it won't be based on genetic differences.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
3-4 generations are not enough to establish noticeable differences between populations.
The only noticeable differences will come from the different diets: those with a richer diet will grow better (taller, bigger), while the other will necessarily reflect the much poorer diet.
For a visual reference, you can look at the famous Robert Capa's photo of a Sicilian farmer and an American soldier during WWII:
You can clearly perceive the difference in size between the well fed American soldier and the farmer. Something similar would be present in your case between the two groups.
But it won't be based on genetic differences.
$endgroup$
3-4 generations are not enough to establish noticeable differences between populations.
The only noticeable differences will come from the different diets: those with a richer diet will grow better (taller, bigger), while the other will necessarily reflect the much poorer diet.
For a visual reference, you can look at the famous Robert Capa's photo of a Sicilian farmer and an American soldier during WWII:
You can clearly perceive the difference in size between the well fed American soldier and the farmer. Something similar would be present in your case between the two groups.
But it won't be based on genetic differences.
answered Jan 31 at 5:22
L.Dutch♦L.Dutch
84.8k28201415
84.8k28201415
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are likely to be genetic differences, but ones that were present at the time the groups split.
Who had access to the bunkers? I'm sure it was not random luck.
The other differences will be that people with a variety of disabilities and health conditions (which may or may not be genetic) are more likely to die off if they are in the wasteland. Since most such conditions are genetic only in terms of how likely you are to get the condition, this will probably not affect the actual genetics. Yet.
For example, there aren't going to be a lot of wastelanders with conditions that affect their stamina (running away from danger), eyesight, or mobility, for example, a heart condition that shows up under physical stress. But the genetics involve multiple alleles throughout the genome (not a single inherited SNP) so it is way too early for this "natural selection" to change the gene pool in any significant way.
Though even one generation can change epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation. It does not change the actual DNA but markers are inherited to a degree. Something like famine can affect generations that never experienced it.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are likely to be genetic differences, but ones that were present at the time the groups split.
Who had access to the bunkers? I'm sure it was not random luck.
The other differences will be that people with a variety of disabilities and health conditions (which may or may not be genetic) are more likely to die off if they are in the wasteland. Since most such conditions are genetic only in terms of how likely you are to get the condition, this will probably not affect the actual genetics. Yet.
For example, there aren't going to be a lot of wastelanders with conditions that affect their stamina (running away from danger), eyesight, or mobility, for example, a heart condition that shows up under physical stress. But the genetics involve multiple alleles throughout the genome (not a single inherited SNP) so it is way too early for this "natural selection" to change the gene pool in any significant way.
Though even one generation can change epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation. It does not change the actual DNA but markers are inherited to a degree. Something like famine can affect generations that never experienced it.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are likely to be genetic differences, but ones that were present at the time the groups split.
Who had access to the bunkers? I'm sure it was not random luck.
The other differences will be that people with a variety of disabilities and health conditions (which may or may not be genetic) are more likely to die off if they are in the wasteland. Since most such conditions are genetic only in terms of how likely you are to get the condition, this will probably not affect the actual genetics. Yet.
For example, there aren't going to be a lot of wastelanders with conditions that affect their stamina (running away from danger), eyesight, or mobility, for example, a heart condition that shows up under physical stress. But the genetics involve multiple alleles throughout the genome (not a single inherited SNP) so it is way too early for this "natural selection" to change the gene pool in any significant way.
Though even one generation can change epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation. It does not change the actual DNA but markers are inherited to a degree. Something like famine can affect generations that never experienced it.
$endgroup$
There are likely to be genetic differences, but ones that were present at the time the groups split.
Who had access to the bunkers? I'm sure it was not random luck.
The other differences will be that people with a variety of disabilities and health conditions (which may or may not be genetic) are more likely to die off if they are in the wasteland. Since most such conditions are genetic only in terms of how likely you are to get the condition, this will probably not affect the actual genetics. Yet.
For example, there aren't going to be a lot of wastelanders with conditions that affect their stamina (running away from danger), eyesight, or mobility, for example, a heart condition that shows up under physical stress. But the genetics involve multiple alleles throughout the genome (not a single inherited SNP) so it is way too early for this "natural selection" to change the gene pool in any significant way.
Though even one generation can change epigenetics. Methylation markers on the DNA itself that turns certain alleles on or off. Epigenetics can carry information acquired after birth and pass it along to the next (unborn) generation. It does not change the actual DNA but markers are inherited to a degree. Something like famine can affect generations that never experienced it.
edited Jan 31 at 15:08
answered Jan 31 at 5:33
CynCyn
9,41612246
9,41612246
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
None. None at all.
90 years? Unless life in the wastelands is unbelievably hard, you have a better-than-average chance of someone still being alive in the wasteland who was there (even if they couldn't remember) when the bunker was closed.
How much genetic difference do you have with your grandfather? Or, at very worst, your great grandfather?
None, of course.
@L.Dutch is right, the environment could bring some differences, but even that wouldn't be horrible. Give the wastelanders a bath, dress them in Fallout Bunker clothes and other than their tan and possibly and accent, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between them.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
add a comment |
$begingroup$
None. None at all.
90 years? Unless life in the wastelands is unbelievably hard, you have a better-than-average chance of someone still being alive in the wasteland who was there (even if they couldn't remember) when the bunker was closed.
How much genetic difference do you have with your grandfather? Or, at very worst, your great grandfather?
None, of course.
@L.Dutch is right, the environment could bring some differences, but even that wouldn't be horrible. Give the wastelanders a bath, dress them in Fallout Bunker clothes and other than their tan and possibly and accent, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between them.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
add a comment |
$begingroup$
None. None at all.
90 years? Unless life in the wastelands is unbelievably hard, you have a better-than-average chance of someone still being alive in the wasteland who was there (even if they couldn't remember) when the bunker was closed.
How much genetic difference do you have with your grandfather? Or, at very worst, your great grandfather?
None, of course.
@L.Dutch is right, the environment could bring some differences, but even that wouldn't be horrible. Give the wastelanders a bath, dress them in Fallout Bunker clothes and other than their tan and possibly and accent, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between them.
$endgroup$
None. None at all.
90 years? Unless life in the wastelands is unbelievably hard, you have a better-than-average chance of someone still being alive in the wasteland who was there (even if they couldn't remember) when the bunker was closed.
How much genetic difference do you have with your grandfather? Or, at very worst, your great grandfather?
None, of course.
@L.Dutch is right, the environment could bring some differences, but even that wouldn't be horrible. Give the wastelanders a bath, dress them in Fallout Bunker clothes and other than their tan and possibly and accent, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between them.
answered Jan 31 at 5:37
JBHJBH
45.1k696216
45.1k696216
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Well dang. I learnt something knew today. I thought genetics took only a few generations to change at most
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:53
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
$begingroup$
Hey, why’d you write Fallout?
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:54
1
1
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
$begingroup$
Wasteland outside, bunker full of survivors, 90 years... sounds exactly like the basic premise of the game Fallout I
$endgroup$
– JBH
Jan 31 at 5:55
1
1
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
Well yeah, I did use a few aspects for general inspiration
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:57
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
$begingroup$
@RobertPaul One of the problems with the Fallout trope is that it is commonly used in post-apocalyptic settings, but is actually very unlikely. There's no real reason to stay in a bunker for 90 years. The most immediately dangerous radioactive elements of fallout have very short half-lives and will be largely absent from the environment within a handful of months, while the slow and insidious isotopes with longer half-lives (e.g. Strontium-90) will be in the environment so long that 90 years makes basically no difference.
$endgroup$
– Arkenstein XII
Feb 1 at 0:49
add a comment |
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1
$begingroup$
We have several collections of intensely realistic portraits from the Antiquity; for example, the Fayum portraits, or the vast Roman portraiture. Those people lived 2000 years ago; a hundred generations separate them from us. Do they look noticeably different from us?
$endgroup$
– AlexP
Jan 31 at 4:55
$begingroup$
@AlexP: No, I mean would their eventually be any noticeable differences
$endgroup$
– Robert Paul
Jan 31 at 5:15
4
$begingroup$
In The 100, their version of Wastelanders had developed a resistance to radiation that the bunker dwellers did not have. My point being that the kind of apocalypse would matter greatly in terms of genetic differences.
$endgroup$
– Brythan
Jan 31 at 5:16
$begingroup$
Is that you, Todd Howard?
$endgroup$
– Agi Hammerthief
Jan 31 at 14:41
$begingroup$
Are we talking about eugenic euthanasia? Are you interested in genetics of the whole population or just individuals?
$endgroup$
– abukaj
Jan 31 at 17:26