I would argue that we're not limited by actual DNA. You can re-create the ancient DNA by looking at the genomes of existing animals.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
At the deepest level, all living things that have ever been looked at have the same DNA code. And many of the same genes.
I thought we'd just sequence the genome once and that would be sufficient for most things in people's lifetimes. Now we're seeing how changeable and adaptable it is, which is why we're surviving and evolving as a species.
Genome design is going to be a key part of the future. That's why we need fast, cheap, accurate DNA synthesis, so you can make a lot of iterations of something and test them.
Our own genomes carry the story of evolution, written in DNA, the language of molecular genetics, and the narrative is unmistakable.
You can now modify the genes of large animals, and the largest animal we are concerned with is the human.
There's no environment I can think of that would have remained constant enough to preserve dinosaur DNA.
With DNA, the ability to find out a lot more with a lot less has increased our ability for identification.
People think if you have deciphered the genome of humans that you can change everything. But you cannot change everything, because you do not know what the genes mean, and you have no methods for changing them, and you can't do experiments with humans like you can with animals.
There is a long history of how DNA sequencing can bring certainty to people's lives.
We have the DNA of our Lord Jesus Christ.