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heirloomgal
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She was a twin in utero, but the twin passed and she absorbed the twin. I suppose this kind of thing happens in many mammalian species. A decade ago, after she got an x ray or something of that nature (I forget) it was revealed (sorry, bit gross this part) that some of that twins dna seemed to have survived. She had internal hair and dental particles show up on the x-ray. That says to me that she must have separate dna in her physiology, unless perhaps they were identical twins? I always wondered if this qualifies as a chimera.I think it can. It certainly can happen with cats (there's that famous one Venus on the internet with the split colored face and the heterochromia).
The literal definition of a chimera is an organism which has more than one cell line with different genotypes. Literally some of their cells have one set of DNA, and others have a different one. It's pretty rare, so if your friend is that it would be notable.
eta: Ok I had to check out Venus - whoa! Fascinating.
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