You cannot be sure of it till you really get to see the baby.
The baby will adopt the genes of both of you, however, the skin color cannot be determined.
Maby a light brown or brown/white, that's my guess!
GENETIC STUDY ON MALE DOMINANT GENES:
Skin color in human beings is controlled by a polygenic inheritance method. C.B Davenport in 1913 discovered that skin color in human beings is controlled by three genes. So even Micheal Jackson has all the genes dominant(which simply means he is dark in complexion) and marries a white or fair colored women there is at least 1 in 64 chances of his children being fair.
We have seen real examples of dark brown or medium brown male with white or white Asian female and in these few situations- every single child came out with same skin color as father. The opposite has been true in those situations where it is white male with dark brown or medium brown female. Each child had a lighter skin tone and closer to the father.
This may not be conclusive, but it may help. Dark eyes, hair are usually dominant genes anyway. For African Americans, each African carries two dominant genes for afro, larger skull, extended jawline- so in situation of Michael Jackson there are new gene therapies (very expensive but yes, the technology does exist today) to literally remove these gene traits. I have seen though White male and African female mix: the daughter had afro, extended jaw line but with white skin and yellow hair! There is definitely something to the male side when it comes to skin color.
Depends on the color brown, if it is a dark brown like the color of dark chocolate it could be bleeding in the stomach which you should seek medical attention for. If it is a lighter color brown it's most likely bile which the stomach continuously produces even if you have not eaten in a few days.
No it is most likely a bruise caused by trauma to the toe. The dark color is from bleeding under the skin.
Most people's hair color darkens during puberty due to hormonal changes, even if the childhood color is already dark.
It entirely depends on which genes are selected randomly in the meiosis divisions which create the Sperm and Egg cells. Your child could in all possibility be as pale as their mother, or as dark as their father. However, it is more likely it will fall somewhere inbetween, but not necessarily bang on the middle. The skin will acquire features of both parents' skin. There is not one gene that codes for skin color... there are many. Therefore, the skin will be a mix of different features. It is also possible for it to be paler of darker than either parent, if there is a throwback to a grandparent or further back.My father has olive skin and my mother has fair, Irish skin. My older brother got light tan color, not as dark as my father's olive, but darker than a medium skin tone. I got my father's dark olive skin. Though the process is random, it is likely that one of your children will have a somewhat darker skin tone.
Dark Purple.
Yes. Or dark brown as a child.
A Dark Lover's Play - 1914 was released on: USA: 2 January 1915
More than likely, a really dark shade of brown.
well it depends on the type of blue but it can be a solid color or more in between
the child could be any range of color. As a mulatto is of mixed race the child could come out either dark or light depending on which gene (dark or light) from the mulatto combines with the white gene.
Most likely your baby will have like a dark green or a brownish greenish color.
Probably brown.
No, color can not be seen in the dark. The only color that can be seen in the dark is black, because it is dark. If it is not completely dark then you might be able to see the color of some objects.
Kiptui is a Kalenjin name for an extremly black child in color, or was born in the dark.
i have dark color stoll
the child will have blondish hair when young then it'll get darker when growing up. The child will most likely have dimples.
Yes white is a dark color.