You'd need a very specialized electron microscope to get down to the level to actually see a single strand of DNA.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I need to have my hands on the DNA of a film.
We can track and see the production of single molecules, trace them and see how they assemble into structures.
I've always been fascinated by what you can learn from looking into your DNA.
I was using very unconventional methods to sequence the telemetric DNA, originally.
DNA is a 'thing' - a chemical that sticks to your fingers.
DNA, like a tape recording, carries a message in which there are specific instructions for a job to be done.
Small bodies, about half a micron in diameter, and later referred to under the name of 'mitochondria' were detected under the light microscope as early as 1894.
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.
According to physical measurements, DNA chains are, on the average, 10,000 units long.
At the deepest level, all living things that have ever been looked at have the same DNA code. And many of the same genes.
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