No, everyone has unique fingerprints, even identical twins (conjoined or not).
No, they are no more similar than brothers and sisters born at different times.
Non identicle twins do NT have the same fingerprints or the same anything.
No, everyone has different fingertips. Siamese twins are identical twins, and identical twins have different fingerprints.
http://www.forensic-evidence.com/site/ID/ID_Twins.html
It depends.If the conjoined twins want to be seperated, they could. But they might not survive. They could. If they wanted to stay the same, the outcome would be staying alive.So, it all depends on what the conjoined twins think.
Just that, female conjoined twins. In some languages all nouns have gender, so in French, Les Jumelles Siamesienne, the enne suffix would mean female. By the way, conjoined twins, being also identical twins, are always the same gender.
Conjoined twins cannot be bred. This condition is not genetic.A set of male conjoined twins fathering children with a set of female conjoined twins will almost certainly produce children who are not even twins at all.
The most famous (Chinese) conjoined twins were the Siamese twins
conjoined twins are very very very rare .
why can't conjoined twins be brothers and sisters
Nature has various safety valves. That is one of them. Conjoined Twins are identical twins with a natural connective bond, therefore they always take the same sex. Fraternal twins, like the fictional Bobbseys, can be Boy and Girl.
Yes. Conjoined twins are always identical (monozygotic) twins, and identical twins are always the same sex.There is a theoretical case where identical twins could be opposite genders, when the babies are female but in one of the females, a branch of one X chromosome breaks away; however, I don't believe this has ever been observed.
The twins were conjoined when they were born.
There is Identical twins, Nonidentical twins and Conjoined twins.
Craniopagus twins are conjoined twins who are attached at the head.
No. Conjoined twins are always identical twins, and never just fraternal twins. Identical twins come from a single embryo that splits. In the case of conjoined twins, a complete split never occurs. So when they come from the same embryo, they are always the same gender.