Difference between revisions of "Talk:The Book of Life"
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:If you read the external link it uses the term book of life. Its a term that scientists used to describe DNA to the layman. The analogy comes from the fact that DNA is composed of a series of letters (nucleotides) and this series of letters is "read" by the transcription mechanism just like you would read a book. The tanscript is turned into proteins etc which are the building blooks of life. Hence DNS is commonlyas the Book of Life.--[[User:Modelmotion|modelmotion]] 00:50, 29 November 2006 (CST) | :If you read the external link it uses the term book of life. Its a term that scientists used to describe DNA to the layman. The analogy comes from the fact that DNA is composed of a series of letters (nucleotides) and this series of letters is "read" by the transcription mechanism just like you would read a book. The tanscript is turned into proteins etc which are the building blooks of life. Hence DNS is commonlyas the Book of Life.--[[User:Modelmotion|modelmotion]] 00:50, 29 November 2006 (CST) | ||
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+ | Agreed with the delete --[[User:Tannhaus|Tannhaus]] 23:05, 7 December 2006 (CST) |
Revision as of 05:05, 8 December 2006
what? what does dna have to do with anything? and isn't an article su[posed to be somewhat related ot it's title? what is the book of life?
- If you read the external link it uses the term book of life. Its a term that scientists used to describe DNA to the layman. The analogy comes from the fact that DNA is composed of a series of letters (nucleotides) and this series of letters is "read" by the transcription mechanism just like you would read a book. The tanscript is turned into proteins etc which are the building blooks of life. Hence DNS is commonlyas the Book of Life.--modelmotion 00:50, 29 November 2006 (CST)
Agreed with the delete --Tannhaus 23:05, 7 December 2006 (CST)