If you can show sufficient evidence for that claim, then you will probably win the Nobel Prize. Seriously. You should go for it.
I’m not a researcher, I am merely relating what I the research has unearthed and simply pointing out the notion that a 98.5% genetic similarily does not
automatically and necessarily means humans and chimps share a recent common ancestry. Further, there are very real and major differences between to two genomes that the 98.5% figure obfuscates, which are as follows:
- When the genomes are aligned, only 2.4 billion of a human genome’s 3.17 aligned with a chimp’s
- To perfectly align the genomes, artificial gaps in either the human or the chimp genome are introduced
- Even while perfectedly aligned, there are fractional differences, especially on how the genomes are organized
When all told, only about 70% of the genomes align. This suggest that there is a significant amount of research still needs to be done in human genetics. This doesn’t even address the recent phylogenetic differences found that suggest more differences between the two species.
As for some support, here is an excerpt from a 2007 article in the journal
Molecular Biology and Evolution, which states*:*
For about 23% of our genome,
we share no immediate genetic ancestry with our closest living relative, the chimpanzee. This encompasses genes and exons to the same extent as intergenic regions. We conclude that about 1/3 of our genes started to evolve as human-specific lineages before the differentiation of human, chimps, and gorillas took place.
(see* Molecular Biology and Evolution*, Vol. 24 (10): 2266-2276 (2007).)