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Familys hit the ops 90/10 all the time with 3+ kids all male or all female.
Drofluf is right that to change that on a global scale, would need an interference/new input into the process. But you know about that early by using statistics.
Think about it this way.
Start with a count of 1. With 1 child, the chance of getting either all-male or all-female is 100%.
Now consider a family of 2. You could have a girl first and then another girl, a girl and a boy, a boy and a girl, or a boy and another boy. The chance of an all-male family is 25% and the chance of an all-female family is 25%, so the total chance of having a one-sex family is 50%.
With a family of 4 you can have GGGG, GGGB, GGBG, GBGG, BGGG, GGBB, GBGB, and so on - 16 outcomes in total, only 2 of them (GGGG and BBBB) single sex. So the chance is 12.5%
With a family of 8, there are 256 possible outcomes (GGGGGGGG, GGGGGGGB, and so on) and only two of them single sex. So the chance is 0.78%.
(Hang on a minute. We have all heard of large families with every child a girl (or boy). Sure, but (a) 0.78% isn't that unlikely (if you had that chance of getting a flat tire on the way to work on any given day, you'd have to get out and put the spare on roughly twice a year), and we can't rule out biological causes - a man's balls can consistently produce mostly or even all X (female) sperm or Y sperm for medical reasons. But we are ignoring biology here so let's go back to the maths.)
Now think about 16 children. Now we have 65,536 possible outcomes, but still only 2 are single sex. So the chance of all of them being male or female is 0.00076%
With 20 children it is 0.000048. With 30 children it's 0.000000047%. With the population of a small city, you'd start with a decimal point and then write zeros until your pen ran out of ink. With the population of the UK, you'd have a decimal point followed by so many zeros that the world couldn't make enough paper to print them on.
If I tossed a coin a million times, one per year, then what is the likelihood that at some point there will be a run of 80 tosses that land on heads?
(And if heads were men then 80 years of just men being born effectively wiping out the human race as no women around to give birth)
"In crocodilians the temperature of egg incubation is the environmental factor determining sex. If the temperature is cool, around 30 °C, the hatchlings are all female. Warmer temperatures, around 34 °C, hatch all males."
Humans, however, have a different system which is purely genetic. The mother provides a single chromosome which we call "X". The father also provides a single chromosome which can be either another X or a different one we call "Y". Any given sperm cell contains one or the other, not both. Pairing of X with X results in a female baby, X and Y produces a male. (There are also 44 other human chromosomes, but these have nothing to do with sex determination.)
Nearly all placental mammals use the same XY system (eutherians such as humans, cows, cats, and mice, and marsupials such as quolls, wallabies, and opossums). A handful of small, obscure placentals use a system where XX = female and a single X (with no matching chromosome) makes a male.
The monotremes (egg laying mammals) have a very complicated system involving 10 sex chromosomes which nobody properly understands yet.
Some insects and some fish use a system similar to the mammalian one. For others, sex is determined by environmental factors.
But you are trying it a million times (well, actually 999,920 times, close enough to a million for our purposes) so your odds of getting 80 heads running goes up to 0.000000000082716%. However we are interested in getting lots of males OR females in a row, so we need to count both heads and tails, which gives us a 0.00000000000000165433% chance of success.
I got dizzy counting those zeros and don't promise that's exactly right. You can check by calculating 100/(2^80)*2 and then multiply that by (number of years - 80).
Note: @Shrews, this is about sex, not gender. They are not the same.