because your identity is split up many different ways bassed on your haritage. the simplest way to say it is: it just depends if one of your parents has several dominate traits
Because they're a mixture of those parents; some from Mom, some from Dad. Occasionally, a child looks very much like one parent, but this is just appearance; exactly half of you came from each parent.
Children share the traits of each parent. Each parent provides 26 chromosomes to the baby and DNA for the developing fetus. There are dominant and recessive genes that determine things like eye and hair color, so when a baby is born they have a combination of both parents DNA.
importance of elders and grandparents in your family?
no justins parents arent hispanic
Eleven identical children are called undecaplets.
they will reproduce (make babies all the time) and if the parents arent satisfied they will eat the children
I don't think so, I have a fetish for diapers, but know that my parents do not, my identical twin does not and I don't believe my children do.
That would be a very unusual situation. Note that due to the normal process of genetic reshuffling that is involved in human reproduction, the children of the two couples would not be genetically identical even though their parents are.
Jiaen Guo is from Germany, but her parents arent. Her parents are from China.
Five identical children born at the same time are referred to as pentuplets.
When a single embryo in a mother's womb splits into two separate embryos early on in embryonic development, identical twins are created. Because the two twin embryos originate from the same single embryo, they will have extremely similar, if not identical, physical appearances and emotional actions when they are born. Identical twins are "identical' because they are created from the same original embryo during development inside the womb, not due to who their parents are.
No, the offspring produced by conjugation are not genetically identical to their parents. Conjugation involves the transfer of genetic material between two bacterial cells, resulting in genetic diversity in the offspring.