Barbarian
Member
Uh.... maybe ask a university professor.
You were offering opinions. I thought you knew about it. It's a simple question: The gorilla gene for cytochrome C is identical to the human gene. If a gorilla gene for this enzyme was somehow grafted onto a human's DNA, would he then be only part human?
Are you saying that the DNA of a Gorilla and that of a Human, over all, are indistinguishable from each other?
I said that? (Barbarian checks) No, it turns out that I said the gene for cytochrome C is identical, right down to individual atoms in humans and gorillas. (that's true for chimps and orangs, too, but there's one atom difference between apes and monkeys).
Seriously?
Are you saying that the DNA of these skulls will have no ability to determine that they are, in fact, not human....or human hybrids with another being?
Someone mentioned that's off-topic. But apparently, it's human DNA.
I always thought that DNA could distinguish between two different humans in such a way that it is applicable in a court of law... Yet, you are telling me that Gorilla DNA and Human DNA is identical...???
I'm telling you that the gene for cytochrome C is identical in all apes, including humans. (which of course means it's identical in all humans)
I think you are using your genetic nomenclature and detail to muddy the water...
Perhaps you don't know what "gene" means. It's a section of DNA that codes for a protein.
Kinda like when someone doesn't really have a response without admitting that they are wrong, and cannot defend their point so they post some elaborate math problem....
This is middle school science. Pretty much everyone has heard of it, although a lot of people don't pay much attention.
I get it.... you have education in genetics...
If you got through 8th grade, you were exposed to this.
.it impresses me not.
Apparently, it didn't impress you the first time you heard it, either.