Michael Hurley

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It turns out, however, that many necessary, functional proteins in cells require far, far more than just four amino acids linked in sequence, and necessary genes require far, far more than just a few bases. Most genes—sections of DNA that code for a specific protein—consist of at least one thousand nucleotide bases. That corresponds to 41000—an unimaginably large number—possible base sequences of that length.
Darwin's Doubt: The Explosive Origin of Animal Life and the Case for Intelligent Design
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