
Source: Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us / Getty
We’ve seen famous celebs like Nicki Minaj and Ciara rock blonde weaves and extensions. They look good doing it too, but can Black people be born with blonde hair naturally? The answer is yes. The Melanesian People, a black community from the Solomon Islands, have become a scientific phenomenon over the last decade due to their bright blonde hair. Here’s what we know so far about the extraordinary indigenous group.
MORE: The Origins Of Black People With Red Hair

Source: Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us / Getty
TYPR1 is the gene responsible for the unique trait
To gain a better understanding of their findings, researchers compared the data they collected from 43 blonde Solomon islanders to 42 dark-haired Islanders. Researchers discovered the blonde participants carried two copies of a mutant gene, called TYRP1, which is present in 26% of the island’s population. TYRP1 stands for tyrosinase-related protein 1, an enzyme previously found to influence pigmentation in mice and humans.
Further research revealed that the rare gene was exclusive to people from the Solomon Islands and absent in the genomes of Europeans. Many people assumed that the blond hair of Melanesia was the result of gene flow — a trait passed on by Europeans, but this is not the case, according to researchers.
Around 5% to 10% of Melanesian people have blonde hair. The gene appears to be more prevalent in younger people across the Island. Researchers believe that when some Melanesians get older, their bright blonde hair begins to fade to a darker hue. This could explain why many adult Melanesians tend to have darker hair.

Source: Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us / Getty
Melanesians are descendants of the first Homosapiens
Blonde hair isn’t the only interesting fact about the Malensians. In 2007, a genetic study led by scholars at Cambridge and Anglia Ruskin Universities found that the Melanesian population was related to the first group of Homosapiens that emigrated from Africa 2,000 generations ago.
Academics analyzed the mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosome DNA of Aboriginal Australians and Melanesians from New Guinea. They compared the data with various DNA patterns associated with early humans.
“The results showed that both the Aborigines and Melanesians share the genetic features that have been linked to the exodus of modern humans from Africa 50,000 years ago,” the University of Cambridge noted of their findings. “These settlers replaced other early humans (such as Neanderthals), rather than interbreeding with them.”

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