![]() Mama has genes N, Y and her skin tone is pale but she doesn't burn in the sun she tans. Papa has genes N & A so his skin tone is medium toned. Let's say you need genes A, N and Y to be dark skinned. So yeah you can get that difference in families. well northern European with pale blonde hair, pale grey eyes, and pale skin. My friend's full blooded sister on the other hand is remarkably. His own father had some chap run across a busy road when in Portugal because the individual thought his father was a local. My friend is easily passable among the local Italians & Mediterranean(s) around here. That friend has an olive complexion, black hair so dark you'd think he had dyed it, and dark eyes. By ridiculously in the old black & white photos if you didn't know who you were looking at you'd think both of them were either mulatto or two very, very dark skinned Mediterranean(s). Her two full blooded brothers on the other hand had a constant year round olive complexion and tanned ridiculously in the sun where she burnt. My siblings and I have fair skin and our cousins have olive skin.Ī close friend of mine his grandmother was lily white skinned. My father's sister married my mother's brother. My Sicilian grandmother passed her dark olive skin to all 5 of her daughters, but not to her son, who had relatively fair skin, but was Italian (Abruzzo area) too. Does skin and hair color involve any dominant/recessive genes or is it just a matter of the combination you get from your parents? Just curious, but it may be quite complex.
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