collage-of-two-contrast-portraits-of-chimpanzee-and-beautifu-232675949-stockpack-adobestock
Collage of two contrast portraits of Chimpanzee and beautiful Roman woman in stone at black background, details, paste space
Image Credit: neurobite - Adobe Stock
ID the Future Intelligent Design, Evolution, and Science Podcast
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

New Study Shatters the 1% Human-Chimp Difference Myth

Episode
2060
With
Emily Reeves
Guest(s)
Casey Luskin
Duration
00:32:51
Download
Audio File (37.6 mb)
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

When scientists originally studied the chimp genome, they used the human genome as a template. This scaffolding technique gave birth to the popular claim that chimp and human genomes are only 1% different. But new research has now blown the 1% myth out of the water. On today’s ID The Future, geologist Dr. Casey Luskin speaks with host Dr. Emily Reeves about this explosive new finding and what it means for the debate over evolution.

For a long time, the public has been told repeatedly that humans are about 98.8% genetically similar to chimpanzees. This statistic has been quoted in many places, including the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, by Bill Nye the science guy, and in major scientific journals like National Geographic, Science, Scientific American, and even Nature prior to the new study. This high degree of genetic similarity has often been used as an argument for common ancestry between humans and chimps. This 1% statistic has become so widely accepted that it could be considered an “icon of evolution”.

However, a groundbreaking new study published in the journal Nature on April 9th, 2025, is shedding new light on this topic. This study provides complete, from-scratch (denovo) sequences of various ape genomes, including the chimpanzee, allowing for a more accurate comparison than previous analyses that used human-guided scaffolding. According to Dr. Luskin, the data from this new Nature paper reveals that the true genetic difference between humans and chimps is significantly greater than previously stated. The difference is at least an order of magnitude larger, showing humans and chimps differ by at least 14%, a major revision of the old statistic. Luskin explains the significance of the finding: “This is really the first time that we can now hopefully get a much more accurate understanding of the true degree of genetic difference between humans and chimps.”

Tune in to hear Dr. Luskin and Dr. Reeves unpack the findings of the new study and explain the implications of these findings for our understanding of human origins and genetic similarity.

Dig Deeper