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brooksieb wrote:my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes ... so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.










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brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.
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jay_a2j wrote:Brown + Brown = Brown
Brown + Blue = Brown
Blue + Brown = Brown
Blue + Blue = Master Race






jay_a2j wrote:brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.
Brown + Brown = Brown
Brown + Blue = Brown/Blue
Blue + Brown = Brown/Blue
Blue + Blue = Blue



brooksieb wrote:jay_a2j wrote:brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.
Brown + Brown = Brown
Brown + Blue = Brown/Blue
Blue + Brown = Brown/Blue
Blue + Blue = Blue
This is how they are not recessive, it's true if my nan and grandad both had brown eyes and my father had blue eyes it's pretty obvious they are not, same goes for 50% of the population of europe in 9000 years.
Just because somebody has brown eyes doesn't mean they pass on the brown eye gene. They could pass one a green eye, or a blue eye gene. If both parents pass on the blue eye gene, that means the kid's gonna have blue eyes.












hecter wrote:brooksieb wrote:jay_a2j wrote:brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.
Brown + Brown = Brown
Brown + Blue = Brown/Blue
Blue + Brown = Brown/Blue
Blue + Blue = Blue
This is how they are not recessive, it's true if my nan and grandad both had brown eyes and my father had blue eyes it's pretty obvious they are not, same goes for 50% of the population of europe in 9000 years.
Just because somebody has brown eyes doesn't mean they pass on the brown eye gene. They could pass one a green eye, or a blue eye gene. If both parents pass on the blue eye gene, that means the kid's gonna have blue eyes.














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brooksieb wrote:jay_a2j wrote:brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.
Brown + Brown = Brown
Brown + Blue = Brown/Blue
Blue + Brown = Brown/Blue
Blue + Blue = Blue
This is how they are not recessive, it's true if my nan and grandad both had brown eyes and my father had blue eyes it's pretty obvious they are not, same goes for 50% of the population of europe in 9000 years.
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brooksieb wrote:How are blue eyes recessive? it's no doubt they are infact a eye mutation, but they do no harm in seeing, my nan and grandad both had brown eyes, with no trace of blue eyes at all, they had 5 children, 2 of them having blue eyes, (no the milkman did not do it....) even more of a bigger fact is before 9000 years ago people did not have blue eyes until a individual was born with blue eyes somewhere in the Ukraine. Moving on now over 50% of Europeans now have blue eyes (that's including countries like Greece) so how can blue eyes possibly be recessive?.




Kingdroid wrote:sure it started as a mutation, but a sit did not hinder the mutated populations growth it stayed alive, but if you have brown AND blue eyed genes, you will over 50% f the time get brown eyes.







Ditocoaf wrote:Okay, I know this has just been explained multiple times, but I'm going to try it with different wording, just to ensure that this makes sense at least once.
You have two eye-color genes. Only one actually dictates what color your eyes are; the dominant one. So if you have a blue gene and a brown gene, you have brown eyes. When you pass on your genes, you only pass on one of those two genes, and it isn't necessarily the dominant one; the other parent supplies the second gene for the child. So if your mother had brown/blue, and your father had brown/blue, then they would both show brown eyes. But, if they both passed on their blue gene, you'd have blue/blue, and with no dominant brown to overpower the blue gene, you would have blue eyes.


















brooksieb wrote:Ditocoaf wrote:Okay, I know this has just been explained multiple times, but I'm going to try it with different wording, just to ensure that this makes sense at least once.
You have two eye-color genes. Only one actually dictates what color your eyes are; the dominant one. So if you have a blue gene and a brown gene, you have brown eyes. When you pass on your genes, you only pass on one of those two genes, and it isn't necessarily the dominant one; the other parent supplies the second gene for the child. So if your mother had brown/blue, and your father had brown/blue, then they would both show brown eyes. But, if they both passed on their blue gene, you'd have blue/blue, and with no dominant brown to overpower the blue gene, you would have blue eyes.
Ok, i kind of understand now thanks.


ParadiceCity9 wrote:brooksieb, 7th grade science is your friend...be one with it and you will get to know it better.

brooksieb wrote:If it is so recessive then howcome if 2 brown eyed people reproduce they have a chance of having blue eyed kids and green eyed kids yet if 2 blue eyed people reproduce they will definately ahve blue eyes, i'm starting to believe what people tell me are true about blue eyes being recessive but if so why did they come into the world in the 1st place is what i don't understand and that blue eyed people can carry on having blue eyed children even if the gene is supposedly recessive. Maybe some blue genes are stronger than other blue genes or some blue genes could possibly be as "strong" or stronger as brown genes, In no way am i saying this is true or i believe this, i'm just saying this as a possibility.
Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.









brooksieb wrote:ParadiceCity9 wrote:brooksieb, 7th grade science is your friend...be one with it and you will get to know it better.
Sir do i have entitlement to speech?, i said in another post on this thread that i do not believe in what i say, i'm just bringing forward a theory, that is probably not correct but is worth a debate without someone commenting on the mentality of other people.
paradicecity9, free speech is your friend...be one with it and you'll get to know it better.













hecter wrote:brooksieb wrote:ParadiceCity9 wrote:brooksieb, 7th grade science is your friend...be one with it and you will get to know it better.
Sir do i have entitlement to speech?, i said in another post on this thread that i do not believe in what i say, i'm just bringing forward a theory, that is probably not correct but is worth a debate without someone commenting on the mentality of other people.
paradicecity9, free speech is your friend...be one with it and you'll get to know it better.
In other words, you're spouting off random thoughts with no science to back it up?

brooksieb wrote:More common sence but in the world of science common sence probably does not account for much...













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