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If you have fingers, I’m guessing you've fingerprints. Those fingerprints are what make you unique, right? That’s why all the smart criminals on TV wear gloves. I mean, not even identical twins have the same prints. But a lot of the way that fingerprints form is, as it turns out, controlled by genetics. Even though a lot of people think of fingerprints as being random, the main pattern, which is the general shape that your print makes, is really a product of your genes. There are three basic classes of fingerprints: There are whorls, which mostly look like swirls or circles; loops, which are just curvy lines that start and end on the same side of the finger; and arches, which start and end on opposite sides of the finger. Now, genetics don’t directly control which of these patterns appear on each finger. But they do affect the factors that lead to the different shapes -- like the symmetry of the finger’s surface. See, between the sixth and eighth week of a fetus’ development, a fetus starts to get these extra thick pads on its fingers and palms and feet, called solar pads. These pads begin to appear when a special kind of stem-cell tissue swells beneath the existing layers of skin. This tissue is called mesenchyme, and it eventually forms connective tissues like skin and blood vessels. In humans, these solar pads don’t stick around for long. Around week ten, the pads stop growing, while the hands continue to grow. For the next five weeks, then, the solar pads smooth out into the hands and feet we’re all familiar with. But what they look like as they disappear is largely controlled by genes, which affect both how the hand grows and when exactly the fingerprints begin to form. And the results are not always symmetrical or uniform. For instance, a finger might grow faster on one side than the other, leading to a solar pad that’s slanted to the left or right like a tiny ramp. If the primary ridges, which are the earliest precursors of the ridges in fingerprints, form along that slant, they’ll make a loop. But if the solar pad isn't’t slanted when the ridges show up, then they’ll form a more symmetrical pattern. Research has found that if the pad is flat, but still prominent, the ridges will turn into a whorl. But if the pad has mostly disappeared, though, then they’ll form an arch. Since these patterns are informed by genetics, the patterns often run in families. BUT! There are smaller intricacies within the fingerprints -- which the experts just call minutiae -- that do vary from person to person, even within families. And we’re not totally clear on how that part works, but research suggests that these finer points are influenced by environmental factors, including the actual position of the fetus in the womb, whether it’s touching the amniotic sac, and even the density of amniotic fluid. Together, these things can tweak the overall pattern, like the number of ridges, or where they converge on your finger. Even in identical twins, then, the...
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