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Les mer Allan C. Wilson
Allan C. Wilson (October 18, 1934 – July 21, 1991) was a pioneer in the use of molecular approaches to understand evolutionary change and revolutionized the study of human evolution. He was one of the most controversial figures in post-war biology and created one of the most provocative theories about man’s origins. He argued that the origins of the human species could be seen through what he termed a “molecular clock.” This was a way of dating, not from fossils, but from the genetic mutations that had accumulated since they parted from a common ancestor. The molecular clock estimated the length of time from divergence, given a certain rate. Wilson followed an international assortment of genes and picked up a trail of DNA that led to a single woman from we all descended – a 200,000-year-old African woman who left a legacy of resilient genes that are carried by all mankind. It was a startling discovery that re-shaped anthropology and evolutionary theory. Scientists called her Eve, but reluctantly; she was not the only woman on earth but she was the most fruitful. Her genes seemed to be in all humans living; 10 billion blood relatives. Eve was, by one rough estimate, your 10,000th great-grandmother. Professor Wilson addressed the students at the Academy’s Achievement Summit in 1988. In 1991, he died at the age of 56 years while undergoing treatment for leukemia.
Allan C. Wilson
Allan C. Wilson (October 18, 1934 – July 21, 1991) was a pioneer in the use of molecular approaches to understand evolutionary change and revolutionized the study of human evolution. He was one of the most controversial figures in post-war biology and created one of the most provocative theories about man’s origins. He argued that the origins of the human species could be seen through what he termed a “molecular clock.” This was a way of dating, not from fossils, but from the genetic mutations that had accumulated since they parted from a common ancestor. The molecular clock estimated the length of time from divergence, given a certain rate. Wilson followed an international assortment of genes and picked up a trail of DNA that led to a single woman from we all descended – a 200,000-year-old African woman who left a legacy of resilient genes that are carried by all mankind. It was a startling discovery that re-shaped anthropology and evolutionary theory. Scientists called her Eve, but reluctantly; she was not the only woman on earth but she was the most fruitful. Her genes seemed to be in all humans living; 10 billion blood relatives. Eve was, by one rough estimate, your 10,000th great-grandmother. Professor Wilson addressed the students at the Academy’s Achievement Summit in 1988. In 1991, he died at the age of 56 years while undergoing treatment for leukemia.
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