1. The environmental stress of cold weather negatively impacts the survival of human beings through its disruption of homeostasis. This disruption severely effects the human body because the body is used to being heated to a particular temperature, and severe decreases from this target temperature causes tremendous stress and trauma to the human body. The cold weather thus makes it much more difficult for the various organ systems of the human body to function properly.
Short Term Adaptation: An example of a short term adaptation to the cold would be shivering. Shivering works to temporarily stop one's body from feeling cold by feeling warmer as a result of the constant muscle movement that shivering produces. However, once a person stops shivering the unpleasant cold feelings return.
Facultative Adaptation: A facultative adaptation to the cold weather would be the human body's response to urinate as to remove fluids from one's body as to lower the person's temperature. The reason that this works is because the human body sends blood to the kidneys so that the person's organs will warm up. With all this blood inside of the kidneys, the organ is forced to expel the urine to make room for the extra blood.
Developmental Adaptation: A developmental adaptation to the cold would be for people's bodies to store more fat so that their bodies would be able to retain more heat. The extra layers of fat causes for more heat to be stored inside of a person's body.
Cultural Adaptation: One cultural adaptation that human beings use to adapt to the cold weather is heavy, thick clothing. Human beings have adapted their clothing styles over thousands of years so that their bodies can be warmed by the thick clothing inside of cold climates.
Some benefits to studying the human adaptations to the cold weather would be that anthropologists and scientists can understand the causes for the genetic differences of humans in cold and warm climates, as well as perhaps to understand why people shiver and do random behaviors that some people might not understand the reason for. This information can be used in a productive way so that people can develop better clothing products to warm people's body and ward off the negative effects of cold weather. They can also use this information to better understand the human body's response to cold weather so as to develop better insulation products for homes.
I would say that one could study race to compare the adaptative responses of someone of African ancestry, for example, to someone of Eskimo ancestry. However, simply using one's skin color or race to classify a person is a poor way to classify somebody, because most races originate from a specific environment, and thus the reason a particular race would exhibit certain characterisitics is all due to their environmental stressors. For example, a group of Asians that has existed for thousands of years in a warm environment would display a different ability to adapt to the cold weather than would a group of Asians who have lived in the cold for thousands of years.