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answer: sort of yes, and no. I don't think "conceived" is the right term, because at conception the fetus is either male or female, depending on its sex chromosomes. However it's true that in early embryological development, they all begin with female characteristics, and those with the Y chromosome then develop male ones. Female, you could say, is the "default" condition. (Or, if you want to get into a war, you could say maleness is a step beyond femaleness). As to the speculation, sexual differentiation and sexual reproduction developed a gazillion years before "mankind" so that the idea that there were a bunch of female-only hominids running around doesn't make sense: once you have a line of organisms that use sexual reproduction (which is just about everything beyond one-celled animals) then you are stuck with needing male and female to produce offspring, else the line dies out.
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| Posts: 1505 | Location: Puget Sound, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Females have the XX chromosome pair. Males have the XY chromosome pair. When a child is being conceived, eggs only have an X to offer because females have no Y chromosome. Sperm can either have an X or a Y to fertilize the egg with, depending upon the cell. So, the child ends up being XY (male) or XX (female), depending upon which sperm fertilizes the egg. There is no YY because the egg doesn't have a Y to combine with the sperm's Y.
This is why it's ironic that a long time ago, if a man's wife didn't give birth to any sons, it was her fault, she was considered a bad wife. In fact, it was a result of the sperm that reached the egg that had an X chromosome.
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