A Study Shows Some Humans Are Evolving to Be ‘Foxier’. It’s Science Done Right

By David Randall

The latest report from David Reich’s genetics lab at Harvard is that “Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia.” In other words, humans have been continuing to evolve in Europe and the Middle East for the last 10,000 years, with significant effect. Reich’s paper broadly substantiates the thesis of Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending’s The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution. Civilization hasn’t ended biological evolution, but proceeds alongside it. 

Reich’s genome-wide association study (GWAS) indicates that West Eurasians have increased or reduced their vulnerability to a variety of ailments. Genetic changes have rendered them less susceptible to leprosy, rheumatoid arthritis, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia, and moreso to coeliac disease and gout. At the same time, there has been positive selection for fair skin, red hair, and intelligence, and negative selection for male-pattern baldness. In summary, West Eurasians have grown foxier, as the arc of their genetic history bends toward fluffy ginger genius. 

Reich’s conclusions are pretty likely to hold water. Too many scientific and social scientific fields have been affected by the irreproducibility crisis of modern science. The worst-hit disciplines use far too loose a definition of statistical significance, p < 0.05. Genome-wide association studies, by contrast, tend to use the extraordinarily tighter standard of p < 5 × 10^ −8. Reich lab’s research includes a variety of different standards of statistical significance, including some that are only of p < 8.9 × 10^ −5. That standard is orders of magnitude more reliable than most research. 

The data Reich’s lab can work with, after all, is remarkably bounteous. As the researchers wrote:

[W]e increased power through a 14-fold increase in sample size, driven by 10,016 ancient individuals for whom we report new data, which combined with previously reported data yields a dataset of 15,836 people spanning 18,000 years … The final dataset included 8,074,573 SNPs [single-nucleotide polymorphisms] and 1,665,051 insertions or deletions (indels) on chromosomes 1–22. 

Science only can advance on sure foundations when you’re reasonably likely the research will hold up. Sociology, psychology, any discipline where you cannot work with millions of pieces of data, cannot be expected to match GWAS levels of rigorous statistical significance. But, as many scientists have proposed, p < 0.01 or p < 0.005 are not impossible goals, even for disciplines less rich in data. Reich’s peers in other disciplines should look at his work and consider the benefits of reasonable certainty that a paper you publish actually says something true. 

Americans in general might also take Reich’s work as a prompt to reconsider our various moratoria on using American Indian biological data to provide gene samples. Reich’s report on West Eurasian genetic data presumably is only a beginning. We may expect reports to come on East Eurasians, Sub-Saharan Africans, Aboriginal Australians, Khoisan in South African, American Indians in Latin America—reports on people all over the world.

Except on the American Indians of the United States.

Our legal, regulatory, and cultural inhibitions mean that there will be an enduring blank spot in the knowledge we gain from the genetics revolution—knowledge which will aid not only paleogenetic research but also advances in medicine tailored to each individual’s DNA. American Indians might be the last people on Earth to benefit from such advances in genetically individuated medicine if we continue to veto researchers’ use of American Indian genetic and paleogenetic data. 

Science funders also should note that science proceeds by joint work in many disciplines and isn’t just a high-tech plaything. The Reich lab’s research depended not least upon “10,016 ancient individuals for whom we report new data.” Those individuals didn’t just show up in laboratories by magic. They came there by careful work by archaeologists, by intelligent observations from interested amateurs, by hard and careful work in caves, in ancient graves, and in sudden gullies opened by rainstorms. Brawn, physical finesse, and something of the Indiana Jones spirit of adventure were as important for making this research possible as microscopes and microchips. Dear Mr. and Mrs. Moneybags: no dig, no data. We all should remember that, too. 

This article was originally published by RealClearScience and made available via RealClearWire.

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strativarius
April 21, 2026 2:56 am

Some Humans Are Evolving

The BBC, schools and universities etc do their bit to put a stop to that – and infantilise.

Reply to  strativarius
April 21, 2026 5:50 am

And doing a pretty good job of dumbing down the kids.

April 21, 2026 3:18 am

You have to separate the straight genetic component from the societal healthcare one. Modern medicine, better working conditions and other factors like food and exercise. If this causes a healthier population that will reflect back on its genetic makeup.
But to look at modern times, i dont see the population getting any healthier in the last 30 years or so. More obesity, more allergies etc. Things are intertwined.

Leon de Boer
Reply to  ballynally
April 21, 2026 4:20 am

You are misunderstanding evolution it doesn’t say YOU or any person will get any healthier and there is no good or bad. Evolution may select FAT people who die young but breed like crazy.

Natural selection acts on genes passed to offspring. If individuals survive to reproductive age and pass on genes for efficient fat storage, evolution “smiles” on them … period end of story.

What you are doing is Layman fallacy that Natural selection somehow makes us better 🙂

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/325668#How-humans-became-the-fat-primate
The findings revealed that humans have anywhere from 14% to 31% body fat, while other primates have less than 9%. Also, DNA regions in humans are more condensed, thereby limiting accessibility to the genes involved in fat metabolism.

Reply to  ballynally
April 21, 2026 6:04 am

Much more obesity.

When I was in the third grade back in the 1950’s, we had 30 kids in that class and every one of us were skinny as a rail, except for one kid, who was seriously overweight. And what is strange was he was from one of the poorest families at the school. Yet, apparently, he had plenty to eat.

In 1987, I volunteered to teach astronomy and space science to kids at the elementary school where my mother taught. This was right after the Space Shuttle Challenger was destroyed during its launch, and I felt like the kids needed to continue thinking positively about the space program.

But I was startled when I saw the school kids. About half of them were overweight. A stark contrast from my childhood, with one out of 30 being overweight. These were third and fourth graders.

All that extra weight is not good for your hearts, kids.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 21, 2026 7:40 am

You and I live in different worlds. Every class in our 1950’s grade school had two or three fat kids. When I attend my grand children’s school events, I’m not seeing many fat kids. Of course, there still are some fat kids and my liberal friends with their confirmation bias point them out.

Reply to  Steve Case
April 21, 2026 10:30 am

Two or three? Out of 30? That’s not too different. Not “different world” difference.

I don’t know. When I look around society I see a lot of very overweight people.

KevinM
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 21, 2026 9:47 am

For genetics, if it does not affect your odds of breeding then it does not count. If your heart explodes through your rib cage at age 50 from eating mayo sandwiches on white bread but you’ve already had six kids? You would be genetically superior to someone who had no kids, invented nuclear fusion and lived to 130 years old while running annual marathons.

Reply to  ballynally
April 21, 2026 7:19 am

More obesity
____________________________________________________________________________________________________

You’re listening to the left wing news media. In the ’50s we didn’t see adults jogging on bike paths which we didn’t have or riding bikes for that matter or working out in store front gyms didn’t have those either. At the time, President Eisenhower addressed the physical fitness issue.

What we have today is Michelle Obama’s obesity crisis when just like global warming there isn’t a problem.

Petey Bird
Reply to  ballynally
April 21, 2026 8:21 am

Public health authorities have been promoting chronic disease for a very long time. Diabetes 2 in particular.
The standard of care is to treat it with drugs until the patient dies.

Ed Zuiderwijk
April 21, 2026 4:03 am

Always knew I was pretty normal. Just saying …

Mr.
April 21, 2026 4:58 am

They should study how Nancy Pelosi managed to evolve without contracting all those ailments, and still look so young.

Is vodka known to be a preservative?

Rud Istvan
Reply to  Mr.
April 21, 2026 7:39 am

Yes.
Fun factoid. After being killed at the battle of Trafalger, Admiral Nelson’s body was preserved in a large cask of brandy for months until returned to England for his state funeral.

Mr.
Reply to  Rud Istvan
April 21, 2026 10:22 am

Yes Rud, I went on a tour aboard HMS Victory at Portsmouth many years ago.
The young sailors who conducted the tour showed the spot where Nelson fell.
They pointed at a deck fitting and joked that he tripped over it on his way back from the brandy barrel.

Reply to  Mr.
April 21, 2026 7:43 am

Google AI says

Former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has never publicly confirmed undergoing any cosmetic plastic surgery. While she has not addressed these rumors, her youthful appearance at age 86 has led to significant speculation from the public, political opponents, and medical experts.

Mr.
Reply to  Steve Case
April 21, 2026 10:06 am

I should have used the /sarc after describing looking young.

Reply to  Steve Case
April 21, 2026 10:41 am

She needs to get those dentures fixed. Not sarc. Not kidding. Its hard to watch an interview.

patg2
Reply to  Mr.
April 21, 2026 4:47 pm

Nancy Pelosi looks REALLY OLD. Better get your glasses prescription checked.

Mr.
Reply to  patg2
April 21, 2026 5:34 pm

note my response to Steve

April 21, 2026 6:14 am

Oh, No! Primate Change! Another crisis!

starzmom
April 21, 2026 6:20 am

First off, I do think this study is robust and accurate. But the cynic in me wonders why, if schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and rheumatoid arthritis are less prevalent** than in the distant past, we see so many commercials for unpronounceable drugs on television for just those ailments. I have yet to see an ad for leprosy treatment, so I guess that is not common in the modern world, or at least the western world where we could afford to treat leprosy with expensive drugs.

** It is possible that the genes are less prevalent, yet the conditions are more prevalent due to environmental factors (drugs, alcohol, etc.).

Mr.
Reply to  starzmom
April 21, 2026 7:26 am

the most-used drugs are taken to treat a condition that has been at pandemic level for decades –
hypo-chondria

KevinM
Reply to  starzmom
April 21, 2026 9:52 am

If you can afford magic beans, sure why not.
If the cost is at least partly socialized? Definitely.

(If I get schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or rheumatoid arthritis I’ll find a way to buy the stuff)

April 21, 2026 6:40 am

The American Indian population experienced a major evolutionary event a few hundred years ago when they were exposed to a variety of diseases to which they had no resistance, as a result there was a 90% death rate.

Fran
Reply to  Phil.
April 21, 2026 12:27 pm

yes, and allowing research on both living and ancient NAI’s would be very interesting. Europeans have also been under considerable pressure from diseases. The fact that Reich finds “resistance to leprosy” is interesting because TB was a major cause of death for several centuries in Europe: Leprosy and TB are caused by very closely related mycobacteria.

starzmom
Reply to  Fran
April 21, 2026 2:41 pm

TB is making a come back in lots of groups, especially the homeless. Presumably it is treated when diagnosed.

April 21, 2026 6:49 am

“negative selection for male-pattern baldness”

As a bald guy, I object to that negative selection. 🙂

Mr.
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 21, 2026 7:30 am

I’m only bald at the top of my head at the back, so I can’t see it or worry about it.

Sunburn is a bitch though 😫

Reply to  Mr.
April 21, 2026 11:09 am

I don’t get sunburned- I’m Italian! Just turn golden brown.

Mr.
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 21, 2026 1:02 pm

half your luck.

old cocky
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 22, 2026 12:33 am

Just turn golden brown.

Golden brown texture, like sun
Lays me down, with my mind, she runs
Throughout the night, no need to fight
Never a frown with golden brown

KevinM
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 21, 2026 9:55 am

If it happened after about 40… he was talking about someone else.

Alan
April 21, 2026 8:49 am

As we evolve, we get cuter. Makes sense.

KevinM
April 21, 2026 9:41 am

Henry Harpending was born in 1944, and possessed the worldview his generation is known for. His writing shared a lot of opinions about race and people groups that made scientific sense in his day but would offend a typical American born in 2004. Example is his belief in IQ score as a measure of intelligence by which to rank the relative proficiency of various ethnicities. He spent a lot of words on the type of topics pseudo-anonymous Wikipedia editors go to war over. I’d like a world where those topics could be discussed openly, but corporate America is not about free speech, I have bills to pay and the internet saves everything. It is important for everyone to avoid uncomfortable questions and emphatically declare the guy an evil but hole until they achieve economic independence.

KevinM
April 21, 2026 9:57 am

West Eurasians” … checks map … Oh, you mean Europeans.

patg2
April 21, 2026 4:43 pm

I am DEEPLY DISAPPOINTED you printed this article. Not only is it not science done right, it’s not even science at all! And it has nothing to do with your focus on climate. Evolution is a fairy tale. We lose genetic information. If this results in better survivability for some diseases, that’s just happenstance. Natural selection might make some traits more prevalent in a population until conditions change, and another trait might be favored. Where would they get so many samples 10,000 years old? They don’t have them. They’re not telling the truth about their samples. Moreover, as ballynally said, much has to do with healthy diet (and sanitation). You can’t replicate anything, because they didn’t do anything that could be replicated to begin with. I strongly urge you to stick to your mission. It would appear you do not have the expertise to evaluate scientific claims outside your expertise, because you thought this was good science.

April 21, 2026 7:50 pm

The prevalence of obesity in modern civilization is fascinating from a genetic perspective. It appears that a minority of people do not store excess fat when they eat too much, whilst most people do convert the excess food they eat into excess body fat.

My experience is that most overweight people tend to blame their genes for the problem rather than blame their uncontrollable desire for tasty food with lots of added fructose.

The truth is, but correct me if I’m wrong, the ability of the body to convert excess food into stored fat, is an ancient survival mechanism.
In ancient times there were frequent shortages of food or famines, due to the droughts and changing weather patterns that still occur today. During times of plenty, those who’s genes enabled them to convert excess food into excess body fat were able to survive during the next famine. They would loose much of their fat, which would gradually be regained after food became available again. Those who did not have such genes would have been less likely to survive.

In modern societies, the genes that cause excess food to be stored as excess body fat are no longer required for survival because we can store food for long periods before it is eaten.
However, evolution is a slow process, and modern medication can interfere with that process.
If modern food systems remained but medical care disappeared, obese people would not live as long and would have fewer offspring. In other words, the natural process of evolution would have a greater effect.