This is certainly the case. Male and female morphology has alot to do with relative testosterone levels. You pump a woman full of testosterone (and she'd have to be, no human being gets muscles like that without being flooded to hell and back with testosterone), she'll take on male characteristics, including significant growth of body/facial hair, loss of significant mammaries, et cetera. It works in reverse for men. Pump a man full of estrogen for long enough and his body will grow fully functional breasts, which can lactate and everything.Darth Wong wrote:Probably a combination of steroids and human growth hormones. The growth hormones cause parts of the skull to continue growing, which is why Barry Bonds has gained two helmet sizes since he started taking steroids and HGH (which, of course, he denies taking). The steroids cause the female to take on more male characteristics, such as pattern baldness and deepened voices.
An example of how closely tied sex is tied to hormones, there is a genetic disorder in places where a developing embyro will have an XY chromosome set, but due to a genetic quirk, won't produce the normal testosterone surge that comes mid-gestation to make male genitalia and the baby will turn out morphologically female. That is, until the child hits puberty, at which point he'll get the normal supercharge of testosterone and he'll go from "female" to a fully function male, same as any man. These individuals are fertile and everything, utterly normal biologically. The article I read this from says this happens in this one region of the Dominican Republic most commonly and what's cool is that the individuals are completely one hundred percent psychological normal as well (Hispanic culture helps, having your little girl turning out to be a boy after all is not really seen as a bad thing).
Gender is partially genetics, but when it comes down to it, alot of what sex you are comes down to hormones and social convention.