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and one of the parents had a european ancestor in the 1800s? Can the blonde hair gene carry on for many generations?

2006-12-14 14:18:50 · 14 answers · asked by choosinghappiness 5 in Pregnancy & Parenting Pregnancy

I've seen it happen before in other asian children. Just wanted your opinions what you thought.

2006-12-14 14:27:26 · update #1

i've seen a white mom give birth to a mulatto baby. her husband is white. one of the husband's ancestor was black. a longggg time ago. i think this is very cool.

2006-12-14 14:33:28 · update #2

14 answers

As long as one of the parents had a ancestor with the gene for blonde hair yes it can happen although it may be very rare. IT would have been recessive gene that caused it but as long as one of the parents is carrying the recessive gen for blonde hair, it is completely possible.

Another example of genes: WHite person, with white parents, and white grand parents ect. Finds out that the have sickle cell. Well they trace their family line and back in the 1800's they have a black ancestor. recessive gene in them has now showed up generations later, in the form of a gentic illness.

2006-12-14 14:30:20 · answer #1 · answered by tekaye70 2 · 0 0

possible but not likely. I am not calling anyone rabbits.. I am just giving a genetic example. i used to raise rabbits. A black mother and a black and white father.. both short haired. She had huge litters and all of the looke the same, same face structure and everything. All were black or black and white. Then one litter, one of the many babies was a brown angora rabbit! An acutal, honest to god long haired angora, and light brown! Never happened again and she had tons of babies that went to good homes.

2006-12-14 14:24:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's possible, the recessive blond gene could lie dormant for generations. It could be that the child is partially albino, or has a trait similar to this.

2006-12-14 14:22:08 · answer #3 · answered by ihave5katz 5 · 1 0

i will not answer this thoroughly because i'm an followed baby that has no organic and organic sisters or brothers, and that i followed 2 little ones and haven't any organic and organic little ones. even with the undeniable fact that, my pal i visit inform you this followed little ones are your own. in case you'll undertake PLEASE end wondering this or that idea will be instilled in those little ones that you undertake, and they'll in no way sense welcome. from time to time i imagine that some adoptees sense like they don't look to be area of the relations, because the dad and mom imagine they somewhat are not their little ones. do not undertake till you've self belief down deep on your heart, they're going to be yours!- no longer honest to you or the youngsters

2016-11-26 20:19:30 · answer #4 · answered by wilcoxen 4 · 0 0

Usually depends on the DNA of the hair,eyes and everything else

2006-12-14 14:26:58 · answer #5 · answered by krysta_joy 1 · 0 0

I don't think so. A blond gene really comes in when either parent has blond hair.

2006-12-14 14:21:40 · answer #6 · answered by Miss Vira 4 · 0 2

both my father and my fiance both have dark brown to black hair......but when I saw pics of them when they were little, they had bleach blond hair....my son had blond hair and curly and now its dirty blond and straightening out...

I also saw on a tv show two white parents had identical twins(or fraternal...but I am pretty sure it was Identical) and one was white and the other was black...but both parents where white....explain that one.

2006-12-14 14:37:32 · answer #7 · answered by latina_peru 2 · 0 1

Sure it's possible. In fact, not even unheard of, but pretty rare.

2006-12-14 14:21:34 · answer #8 · answered by makin_the_same_mistakes 5 · 1 0

Anything is possible but it's highly unlikely.

2006-12-14 14:23:38 · answer #9 · answered by Miriam Z 5 · 0 1

there's a possibility

2006-12-14 14:26:24 · answer #10 · answered by fang 4 · 0 0

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