Photography Genetic Anomalies - Please post your "weird" plant pics here with descriptions

And here my second. This is amphetamine auto by cream of the crop topped at 4 weeks now on week11 and part of my first ever grow flowering nicely. this one is a strange one on both of the first branches have grown as a "twin" should I say and both have split at different times its almost lts topped itself not only that but one of the fan leaves on the colas has produced calyx and pistils down its arm
 

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Here you go guys
Random one for ya.
THC BOMB
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started out as a tri leaf then kind of fused back to two with a wierd fat fan leaf on one side. Now shes got her two normal nodes but the random fan leaf deided to grow a stem & 3 more nodes = 5 seperate nodes.
Day 15 today bit of a runt but keen to see how she plays out
 

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TSG JillyBean (60 days) 'Joined stem'? or did I finally FIM correctly?
Had 2 JB seeds left so what the heck - 1 was lanky and the other stout. I was doing my topping of both and after a few days noticed that the stem on the stout flattened out and got rigid like it was a double trunk - then I noticed the top looked like a quad packed tip.
Did I just FIM right for once or is this some'strange' thing? 1st pic double stem, 2nd pic normal bottom growth, 3rd pic top cluster of tips
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I have one growing at the moment . [ Photo ]
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Stem looks familiar - had to double-take.
Is this an abnormality? Should I start some clones? I love the growth pattern.
 
@RED SOHI
Fasciation (pronounced /ˌfæʃiˈeɪʃən/, from the Latin root meaning "band" or "stripe"), also known as cresting, is a relatively rare condition of abnormal growth in vascular plants in which the apical meristem (growing tip), which normally is concentrated around a single point and produces approximately cylindrical tissue, instead becomes elongated perpendicularly to the direction of growth, thus, producing flattened, ribbon-like, crested (or "cristate"), or elaborately contorted tissue.[1] Fasciation may also cause plant parts to increase in weight and volume in some instances.[2] The phenomenon may occur in the stem, root, fruit, or flower head. Some plants are grown and prized aesthetically for their development of fasciation.[3] Any occurrence of fasciation has several possible causes, including hormonal, genetic, bacterial, fungal, viral and environmental causes.
 
Here is my pair of twins. This is a Fast Buds Six Shooter. The main shoot came up and the another.

I did cut it off after taking these pics.

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