Evolution doesnt really occur in years - it occurs in generations - where the fittest survive and the characteristics most favourable to the environment persevere - and so yes I do believe that if it comes to the point where the conditions induced in the world as a result of global warming undoubtedly kill people - then only the fittest who are most temperature and condition tolerant will survive and pass down those genes and as a result - the surviving human beings will have 'adapted' to Global Warming - but as we know if changes in climate or conditions occur too fast for a species to adapt then that species becomes 'extinct' - so it all depends on the swiftness of change really - and as humans do not reproduce the same way mice do (i.e quickly) then most generations are nearly a century or half a century apart - and if Global Warming really does take its toll at the predicted rate - then i do not think the human race will have time to evolve (I mean come on, It's predicted that the human beings who are kids now will have to protect their eyes from the sun the same they protect their skin! as adults - that's only about 50 years down the line) and adapt - we may simply be wiped out or many of us may die and only a privilaged minority will survive using technology to enclose themselves in an artificial environment that they can survive in (i.e as we do when we have fans in the summer and heaters in the winter) - only on a much larger scale.
Also what I have discussed here is the theory of natural selection rather than evolution - It has been disproven that the Giraffe's long neck was the result of generations of stretching, rather it was the animals with the longest necks that were able to reach up to the highest branches for food and so over many generations the long neck characteristic dominated - also mice reproduce much faster and so generations of mice, plants and bacteria (resistant to antibiotics - are the 00.01% that survive) have been used to observe the course and nature of evolution - and so it's simply survival of the fittest as it has always been - evolution also encompasses helpful mutations. Recent studies showed that a species of Finch in the galapagos islands has evolved to have a new shape of beak in just 200 years to eat the seeds most readily available - and so no one can really predict the course of evolution - but its all a matter of time really - and I do not think that the human race has 'the time' at hand to adapt.
2006-07-28 03:36:39
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I dont's think so. Evolution usually takes millions of years to take place, the rate of global warming is too fast for us to adapt! Let's hope that more people take steps to slow down global warming instead of hoping for the course of nature to happen faster!
2006-07-28 03:30:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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In thought, sure, however the opportunities that people are already evolving with the aid of worldwide warming's effect already are slender to none. It takes hundreds and hundreds of years for a species to adapt, so except worldwide warming have been a million. genuine and at present going on and a pair of. persevering with for hundreds of years yet to come again, the respond isn't now, yet ultimately we can with the aid of fact worldwide warming is a element that impacts the way the human race lives.
2016-10-08 10:19:03
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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it's not our bodies that will have to evolve to live with global warming, it is the earth. no, i don't think our bodies will evolve to the changes in the earth. it's too rapid. it's not like it happened over natural time, it was caused, so the globe will not have time to adapt, nor will we. we have to look for ways to reverse it .
2006-07-28 03:45:05
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answer #4
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answered by Debi K 4
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Given sufficient time, it is a possibility, but even the Pentagon has said that it could be as near as two years...It takes centuries for a single trait to change, and perhaps millenia before we could even begin to change sufficiently and with the predictions of ice-cap melting, we might have to evolve gills
2006-07-28 03:32:52
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answer #5
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answered by Frank 6
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Yes SOME humans will adapt to the hotter temperatures. Not all.
2006-07-28 03:29:47
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answer #6
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answered by a_delphic_oracle 6
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Never well just die when global warming happens
2006-07-28 03:33:57
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Evolution takes thousands, if not millions of years. We're in a lot more immediate danger than that.
2006-07-28 03:31:53
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answer #8
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answered by cross-stitch kelly 7
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Yes,
But remember we can't foretell the course of evolution.
2006-07-28 03:31:19
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answer #9
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answered by RebelBlood 3
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Well Maybe
2006-07-28 03:30:26
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answer #10
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answered by !HIGH FIVE! 5
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