English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-12-15 01:27:41 · 25 answers · asked by john h 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Newborn & Baby

25 answers

No, no one in the world out of billions of people have the same fingerprint. Each person has their own fingerprint and tongue print too!

2006-12-15 02:03:41 · answer #1 · answered by yahoocraze 3 · 0 0

If this is the kind of thing that keeps you up at night, babe, don't ever have teenagers. The sound-bite answer to your question is yes--identical twins have fingerprints that can be readily distinguished on close examination. However, the prints do have striking similarities. In fact, before the arrival of modern genetic testing, similarity of fingerprints was often used to determine whether twins were identical or fraternal. (Identical twins, you'll recall, are genetic duplicates who develop from a single egg. Fraternal twins develop from separate eggs and are no more closely related than ordinary siblings, except that they spend nine months sharing an extremely small bedroom.)

Twin fingerprints are much beloved by scientists, who see them as a classic arena for the old nature-versus-nurture debate: What made you what you are today, your genes or your environment? Twin fingerprints clearly show that it's a little of both. If you compare palm prints and fingerprints of the Dionne quintuplets (born in 1934, they were the first quints of which all five survived), you find that the broad-brush pattern of lines, whorls, loops, etc., as well as what researchers call "ridge count," were quite similar for the whole crew. Nonetheless each kid had unique prints due to differences in detail. "There is as yet no evidence that the arrangement of the minutiae (ending ridges, bifurcating ridges, etc.) is in any way genetically influenced," writes fingerprint expert James Cowger. Presumably these minor but crucial differences arise from random local events during fetal development, the same kind of thing that makes each snowflake unique.

"But Cecil," you say, "you yourself revealed that duplicate snowflakes have been found!" So I did, but don't think that's gonna help you beat a murder rap. One genius has computed that the chances of duplicating even a portion of a fingerprint are 1 in 100 quintillion (one followed by 20 zeros). Multiply that by the totality of each finger times ten fingers and you can see why O.J. thought he'd have better luck hiring a rhyming lawyer. (OK, O.J.'s problem was DNA, not fingerprints, but you know what I'm saying.)

Now think what this tells us about the nature of life. (You thought this was just about fingerprints? And Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance was just about motorcycles!) Fingerprints suggest we are not simply the prisoners of our genes. On the contrary, much of our physical makeup seems to be improvised--improvised, moreover, not by some master jazz musician, but by a collection of stupid molecules. How can this be? For that matter, how does this whole business of "gene expression" work? I mean, you start off with a little blob of protoplasm, and the cells divide, and somehow one bunch of cells knows it's going to wind up being the liver, another the eyeball, and another the right pinkie . . . but how? How does this fabulously complicated creature arise from the genetic information in the chromosomes? I gotta confess to you, friends. It stumps even me.

Let's close with one question maybe we can answer. Assuming the Creator didn't make fingerprints solely as an aid to law enforcement, what are they for, anyway? James Cowger thinks he knows. He calls fingerprints "friction ridges" and suggests they make it easier to get a grip. And these days, God knows, couldn't we all use the help?

2006-12-15 01:59:46 · answer #2 · answered by Jillary von Hämsterviel™ 7 · 0 1

Simple answer is no.

Even though identical twins might grow in the same uterus, they have different lengths and diameters of umbilical cord, so they will each get a different blood flow. The twin with the lesser blood flow will cut down the blood flow to the lower body, to preserve it for the brain. By an accident of anatomy, this gives more blood flowing into the arms. The baby ends up with proportionately bigger fingers, and more whorls in their fingerprints. Seems that there are already environmental factors happening in the womb, even with twins that have the exact same DNA makeup.

In 2003, a paper called On the similarity of identical twin fingerprints was published in The Journal of the Pattern Recognition Society. They found that the fingerprints of 94 "identical" twins were not identical - although they were more similar than non-related people.

2006-12-15 02:52:00 · answer #3 · answered by LP 1 · 0 0

No. If they are identical twins, that is the only difference in them. I've heard that fingerprints are formed in the womb when the baby rubs stuff...it makes the skin move a certain way. I don't know if that's true, but it's what I've heard in a class of mine. Either way, they don't have the same fingerprints.

2006-12-15 01:30:28 · answer #4 · answered by Hootie562 3 · 1 0

no. just because you they are twin that doesn't mean that they have the same finger print, they might look alike but they would be their own individual. i h ave twin myself and the both are very different from each other.

2006-12-15 01:33:02 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.. I have triplets and I can guarantee that they all have their own set of fingerprints!

Even identical twins have their own finger print.

2006-12-15 01:40:56 · answer #6 · answered by eric 2 · 0 0

No, no one person has the same fingerprints as someone else. Including identical twins.

2006-12-15 01:35:52 · answer #7 · answered by Jesse's Girl 2 · 0 0

I have twin sisters and they have thier own, set of finger prints,

2006-12-15 01:30:43 · answer #8 · answered by misty blue 6 · 1 0

No but identical twins do have the same DNA

2006-12-15 01:35:47 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

No, no one has the same finger prints. Its like tongue prints and snowflakes.

2006-12-15 01:35:44 · answer #10 · answered by miss bean 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers