1 00:00:01,800 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey brain Stuff, 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:11,799 Speaker 1: Lauren Voge bomb here A. One of life's great marvels 3 00:00:11,920 --> 00:00:15,760 Speaker 1: is that, much like snowflakes, no two fingerprints are alike. 4 00:00:16,560 --> 00:00:19,560 Speaker 1: This even goes for identical twins who split from the 5 00:00:19,680 --> 00:00:24,160 Speaker 1: very same egg and sperm. Although it's not entirely impossible 6 00:00:24,239 --> 00:00:27,520 Speaker 1: for two fingerprints to match up, the odds are way 7 00:00:27,600 --> 00:00:30,840 Speaker 1: against it, as in like one in sixty four billion, 8 00:00:31,680 --> 00:00:35,760 Speaker 1: definitely not odds you want to take to Vegas. Fingerprints 9 00:00:35,760 --> 00:00:39,760 Speaker 1: have been studied for millennia, but the FBI today identifies 10 00:00:39,800 --> 00:00:44,160 Speaker 1: eight primary types of fingerprint patterns. These include four types 11 00:00:44,200 --> 00:00:47,120 Speaker 1: of loops, two types of arches, one type of whirl, 12 00:00:47,400 --> 00:00:50,879 Speaker 1: and a so called accidental type, which combines characteristics of 13 00:00:50,880 --> 00:00:55,440 Speaker 1: all three patterns. But even within those patterns, there's tremendous 14 00:00:55,440 --> 00:00:59,480 Speaker 1: potential for differences in spacing, depth, angles, m so on. 15 00:01:00,200 --> 00:01:03,920 Speaker 1: A prince pattern depends on a potent and unique combination 16 00:01:04,040 --> 00:01:09,800 Speaker 1: of genetics plus environment. During development. A human skin is 17 00:01:09,959 --> 00:01:13,560 Speaker 1: easily affected by its environment, and that's why people who 18 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:15,679 Speaker 1: spend a lot of time in the sun or doing 19 00:01:15,720 --> 00:01:19,399 Speaker 1: manual labor tend to have freckled, sunburned, or tougher skin 20 00:01:19,520 --> 00:01:23,480 Speaker 1: than those who don't. This trait begins in the womb. 21 00:01:24,200 --> 00:01:27,680 Speaker 1: As a fetis grows, the epidermis and the dermis, that is, 22 00:01:27,760 --> 00:01:31,479 Speaker 1: the outside and inside layers of the skin, come together naturally, 23 00:01:31,640 --> 00:01:36,000 Speaker 1: which produces friction ridges. The ridges get their basic design 24 00:01:36,160 --> 00:01:39,600 Speaker 1: from the genes of the baby's parents, but fetal cells 25 00:01:39,680 --> 00:01:42,839 Speaker 1: work at their own individual pace, which causes the skin 26 00:01:42,920 --> 00:01:47,400 Speaker 1: to grow and stretch and move in different ways. A 27 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:51,960 Speaker 1: fetus's budding fingerprints, which develop between thirteen and nineteen weeks 28 00:01:51,960 --> 00:01:56,000 Speaker 1: of gestation, can also be influenced by the nutrients it's getting, 29 00:01:56,240 --> 00:01:59,240 Speaker 1: how it's positioned in utero, or even if it rubs 30 00:01:59,240 --> 00:02:03,720 Speaker 1: against the wound more umbilical cord. Once a fingerprint is developed, 31 00:02:03,920 --> 00:02:06,680 Speaker 1: it remains static for the life of the person in question, 32 00:02:07,240 --> 00:02:11,400 Speaker 1: barring major damage from things like skin diseases, burns, or scarring. 33 00:02:13,440 --> 00:02:18,200 Speaker 1: Even the most identical of twins can experience individual genetic mutations, 34 00:02:18,480 --> 00:02:22,200 Speaker 1: making them ever so slightly different from one another. As 35 00:02:22,240 --> 00:02:26,440 Speaker 1: we develop, signaling pathways help our genes communicate to complete 36 00:02:26,440 --> 00:02:31,640 Speaker 1: their individual instructions. These are very sensitive to the womb's environment, 37 00:02:31,960 --> 00:02:36,000 Speaker 1: which is why identical twins aren't one hundred percent genetically alike, 38 00:02:36,200 --> 00:02:40,760 Speaker 1: as was previously thought. According to a study published in 39 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:44,560 Speaker 1: the journal Cell in twenty twenty three, three different chains 40 00:02:44,600 --> 00:02:49,880 Speaker 1: of signaling in particular, appear to affect how the fingerprint develops. 41 00:02:49,880 --> 00:02:52,840 Speaker 1: Some pathways have been found to tamp down the growth 42 00:02:52,919 --> 00:02:56,720 Speaker 1: of ridges, whereas others encourage them to develop. A Meanwhile, 43 00:02:56,880 --> 00:03:00,280 Speaker 1: a third kind affect how big or small ridges or 44 00:03:00,280 --> 00:03:05,239 Speaker 1: whorls are, and also how they're spaced out. Since everyone's 45 00:03:05,280 --> 00:03:09,440 Speaker 1: pathways and signals are different, these effect how the fingerprints 46 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:14,000 Speaker 1: turn out. In short, abzilion little factors come into play 47 00:03:14,120 --> 00:03:18,000 Speaker 1: when skin layers first form to create something that's truly 48 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:23,040 Speaker 1: one of a kind. And in case you're curious, just 49 00:03:23,080 --> 00:03:26,400 Speaker 1: because non human animals might not have fingers per se, 50 00:03:26,840 --> 00:03:29,840 Speaker 1: that doesn't mean that they don't develop similarly unique traits. 51 00:03:30,480 --> 00:03:35,240 Speaker 1: For example, cats and dogs have unique noses. The pattern 52 00:03:35,320 --> 00:03:37,880 Speaker 1: of bumps on the nose of each dog and cat 53 00:03:38,280 --> 00:03:46,480 Speaker 1: is their own, and much like fingerprints on humans. Today's 54 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:49,560 Speaker 1: episode is based on the article why even identical twins 55 00:03:49,600 --> 00:03:53,040 Speaker 1: have different fingerprints on HowStuffWorks dot com, written by Leo Hoyt. 56 00:03:53,480 --> 00:03:56,680 Speaker 1: A Brainstuff is production of iHeartRadio in partnership with HowStuffWorks. 57 00:03:56,680 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 1: Dot com and is produced by Tyler Klang. Four more 58 00:03:59,400 --> 00:04:03,120 Speaker 1: podcasts My Heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, 59 00:04:03,200 --> 00:04:05,040 Speaker 1: or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.