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Editing Science in the Re-imagined Series

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A small founding population is prone to the effects of inbreeding, but the historical example on Earth indicates that, with the proper regulation of consanguineous marriages, it should not be a problem for a city larger than a few hundred people<ref name="Birdsell">See "Biological Dimensions of Small Human Founding Populations" by J.B. Birdsell in ''Interstellar Migration and the Human Experience''. University of California Press, 1985.</ref>. The population on New Caprica was drawn from the full [[Twelve Colonies]] so its initial genetic diversity should be high.
A small founding population is prone to the effects of inbreeding, but the historical example on Earth indicates that, with the proper regulation of consanguineous marriages, it should not be a problem for a city larger than a few hundred people<ref name="Birdsell">See "Biological Dimensions of Small Human Founding Populations" by J.B. Birdsell in ''Interstellar Migration and the Human Experience''. University of California Press, 1985.</ref>. The population on New Caprica was drawn from the full [[Twelve Colonies]] so its initial genetic diversity should be high.


These factors will apply wherever the human population settles, assuming it does not find the [[Thirteenth Tribe (RDM)|Thirteenth Tribe]] with its existing population base. There is a reason it took ''Homo sapiens'' on Earth over 100,000 years to grow from a population of 50,000 to a global technological civilization: population size is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for economic development, because it allows for division of labor<ref name="Hodges">See "The Division of Labor and Interstellar Migration" by William A. Hodges in ''Interstellar Migration and the Human Experience''. University of California Press, 1985.</ref>. The Colonials may be able to leapfrog because of their existing knowledge and skills, but judging from the [[History of the Twelve Colonies]], it took the tribes leaving Kobol roughly 2,000 years to develop into an advanced civilization. One can argue that it would take the surviving human population an equivalent length of time to do the same---perhaps longer, given that their exodus was unplanned.
These factors will apply wherever the human population settles, assuming it does not find the [[Thirteenth Tribe (RDM)|Thirteenth Tribe]] with its existing population base or merge with the [[Humanoid Cylon|Cylon]] population. There is a reason it took ''Homo sapiens'' on Earth over 100,000 years to grow from a population of 50,000 to a global technological civilization: population size is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for economic development, because it allows for division of labor<ref name="Hodges">See "The Division of Labor and Interstellar Migration" by William A. Hodges in ''Interstellar Migration and the Human Experience''. University of California Press, 1985.</ref>. The Colonials may be able to leapfrog because of their existing knowledge and skills, but judging from the [[History of the Twelve Colonies]], it took the tribes leaving Kobol roughly 2,000 years to develop into an advanced civilization. One can argue that it would take the surviving human population an equivalent length of time to do the same---perhaps longer, given that their exodus was unplanned.


The humans will have to develop agriculture, industry, and infrastructure almost from scratch. In the time it takes them to do so, there will be a slow erosion of knowledge, as the original population with its memories of the Twelve Colonies dies off. It is quite likely that economic development would regress before it improves. Indeed, after less than two years, the humans have already exhausted their supply of medicines and have developed no way to manufacture more.
The humans will have to develop agriculture, industry, and infrastructure almost from scratch. In the time it takes them to do so, there will be a slow erosion of knowledge, as the original population with its memories of the Twelve Colonies dies off. It is quite likely that economic development would regress before it improves. Indeed, after less than two years, the humans have already exhausted their supply of medicines and have developed no way to manufacture more.

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