In article <1128453825.549784.281750@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com> "jacobisrael" <jacob1srae1ite@gmail.com> writes:
There are 3 million base pairs in the human genome.
You know, you may well be right. This would fit in perfectly with
your theory of separate creations. You, for example, might
well have only three million base pairs.
Which would mean that you have something like 20 to 30 genes, total.
And that would explain so very much.
The rest of us, however, have three billion base pairs:
DNA is made up of four similar chemicals (called bases and abbreviated
A, T, C, and G) that are repeated millions or billions of times throughout
a genome. The human genome, for example, has 3 billion pairs of bases.
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/faq/faqs1.shtml
{ tired and utterly irrelevant combinatorial explosion argument deleted,
as it in no way applies to the actual mechanisms of evolution}
READ: a "scientist" who "thinks" that 3 million base pairs of the human
genome just "fell into place at random" is NOT a scientist--he/she's an
IDIOT.
You're right, for once. Which is why no scientist thinks that.
-- cary
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