No. It is probably about 50-50.
Yes. See Wikipedia - Pingelap (#Color-blindness)
who discovered color blindness
color blindness night blindness snow blindness
It is not true that color blindness is most common in females. Color blindness is most common in males and approximately 8 percent of men have it.
The cause of color blindness is X-linked factors.
Color blindness is hereditary and non-communicable.
Color blindness comes in varying degrees. With complete color blindness a person sees only black and white, no colors. There is also partial color blindness, which prevents a person from fully perceiving all colors, although there is some color perception. There are few practical consequences to a lack of color vision - it can be harder to tell when fruit is ripe. But then, you can still feel the fruit to see how hard it is.
No - colour-blindness is the inability of the brain to interpret correctly colours that the eyes see, or maybe the eyes have a defect in their structure that sends the wrong signals to the brain. Blindness (total?) is when the eyes are unable to send visual signals to the brain at all. Maybe the optic nerve is damaged, or the eyes themselves are damaged - there are various medical reasons for the cause of blindness.
Colour (color) blindness is genetic and is not curable.-- The question asks whether red-green color blindness is treatable, not curable.
Colour (color) blindness is genetic and is not curable.-- The question asks whether red-green color blindness is treatable, not curable.
The cure of color blindness is to drink dairy products and get lots of excerise.
howie mandle has color blindness and so does oprah