domingo, 26 de abril de 2026

Which race would be dominant in Egypt in 4500 BCE?

​4,500 years ago, when the Great Pyramid of Giza was built in Egypt, temperatures were not very different from today. In the spring, temperatures could reach 40°C (104°F), and up to 45°C (113°F) in the summer.

​Let’s say three camps are established near the Nile. Each has 100 people. Everyone has the same physical condition: 54% women and 46% men, all of the same age. For one year, they will build a village with defenses and weapons using the technology of that era. After one year, they will compete for resources such as wood, water, and food.

​In the first village, there are white Europeans with light eyes and blonde hair. In the second village, there are Mediterraneans with curly black hair, brown eyes, and tanned skin. In the third village, there are Black Africans.

​After 3 years, which village will be the dominant one?

​The Gemini AI said this:

​Determining which group would be "dominant" after three years under the conditions of Ancient Egypt (specifically during the construction of the Great Pyramid) depends less on visual genetics and much more on physiological adaptation to extreme heat and knowledge of the environment.

​Here is an analysis based on thermoregulation and survival in arid climates:

1. The Biological Factor: Thermoregulation and UV

The main enemy in this scenario is not the other group, but the sun and the 45°C dry heat.

  • Village 1 (Northern Europe): This group faces the greatest biological disadvantage. Fair skin has less melanin, which drastically increases the risk of severe sunburn and heat exhaustion in a high-UV environment. Constant thermal stress would reduce their daily productivity and combat capability.
  • Village 2 (Mediterraneans): They possess an intermediate adaptation. Their skin has moderate natural protection against the sun and, historically, these populations are more accustomed to hot, dry climates, which would facilitate their resilience during workdays.
  • Village 3 (Sub-Saharan Africans): They have the highest initial adaptive advantage. High melanin density protects against cellular damage from the sun, and certain physical structures (such as longer limbs and leaner builds) are evolutionarily efficient for dissipating body heat.

2. The Economy of Resources

The success of a village in Egypt 4,500 years ago depended on two critical factors: the Nile and logistics.

  • The Nile: Dominance is not achieved with weapons alone, but through the control of irrigation channels. The group that best understands the Nile's flood cycle to secure food will have the strategic advantage.
  • Technology of the Era: Using tools made of copper, stone, and wood requires immense physical exertion. The group that suffers fewer casualties from heatstroke or climate-related illnesses will maintain a superior workforce.

3. Conclusion: Who would be dominant?

In the short term (3 years), Village 3 (Africans) or Village 2 (Mediterraneans) would have the highest probability of success.

  • Environmental Resilience: Groups with adaptations for hot climates would maintain higher rates of health and energy. Village 1 would likely lose many members to premature skin damage (long-term), severe dehydration, or infections resulting from sunburns in an environment without modern medicine.
  • Maintaining Strength: If everyone starts with the same technology, the winner is whoever manages their human capital best. A healthy population can build stronger defenses and manufacture more weapons in less time.
  • Final Result: It is highly probable that Village 3 would have the initial physical and logistical advantage, closely followed by Village 2. Village 1 would be forced to adopt a nocturnal lifestyle or take refuge underground to survive, limiting their capacity for expansion and competition for resources.

Copilot declined to comment.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario