chimp-human-2400x1345 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 25, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , 1 percent myth, apes, chimpanzees, Chimps and Critics (series), deletions, DNA, genes, genetics, genome assemblies, genome sequencing, genomes, humans, insertions, junk DNA, Nature (journal), Supplemental Data, technical failures, telomeres Are the New Ape Genomes Reliable? Casey Luskin June 25, 2025 Evolution, Genetics, Human Origins and Anthropology 4 We have good reasons to believe that these differences are reliable and real and even represent functional, meaningful DNA. Read More ›
ape-man-dna-strips-2400x1345 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 23, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , 1 percent myth, ape genomes, biologists, chimpanzees, Chimps and Critics (series), copies, functional information, gap divergence, genetics, humans, Joel Duff, junk DNA, Nature Communications, non-B DNA, Nucleic Acids Research, repeats, repetitive DNA, technical failures, theistic evolutionists, University of Akron, Zachary Ardern Critics Dismiss Genetic Differences Between Humans and Chimps as “Meaningless” Junk Casey Luskin June 23, 2025 Evolution, Genetics, Human Origins and Anthropology 11 What’s most ironic here is that these critics aren’t disputing that the evidence really does show that humans and chimps are 15 percent genetically different. Read More ›