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Having recently completed the first stage of the ground breaking David
Fontaine Genome Project, I thought I would share a sample of his DNA ;-)
Apologies to Crick and Watson.
--
Ian
Inkwell: Ian's Homepage
http://www.topcities.com/cartoon/inkwell/index.htm
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Attachments:
Download 'dddtt.jpg' (141 KB)
Download 'ddtt.jpg' (117 KB)
Preview of image 'dddtt.jpg'
Preview of image 'ddtt.jpg'
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Oops I didn't realise it was so many KB -- sorry all.
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Hi Ian,
don't we need four colors for a "real" DNA? I can only see red green and
blue. But maybe David is some kind of mutation or even an alien.
No, no ... he must be a bacterium. Some bacteriums have a ring of DNA.
(If this theory is true, then a bacterium makes better POV images than
me!)
And remember that you can't mix all color pairs. As far as I remember
(my last lessons in biology are 11 years past) not all colors can be
combined. There are only two pairs that fit.
Karl (the germ)
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Ian Witham wrote:
> Having recently completed the first stage of the ground breaking David
> Fontaine Genome Project, I thought I would share a sample of his DNA ;-)
> Apologies to Crick and Watson.
Tee-hee!
Hmm, in real DNA, one nitrogen base is always opposite another (eg
red<->green blue<->yellow) so the two strands are ocmplimentary.
But, where does the enzyme begin transcription and how does the RNA enter
the ribosome? :)
--
David Fontaine <dav### [at] faricynet> ICQ 55354965
Please visit my website: http://www.faricy.net/~davidf/
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Karl Pelzer wrote:
> Hi Ian,
>
> don't we need four colors for a "real" DNA? I can only see red green and
> blue. But maybe David is some kind of mutation or even an alien.
> No, no ... he must be a bacterium. Some bacteriums have a ring of DNA.
> (If this theory is true, then a bacterium makes better POV images than
> me!)
Gee, I saw the yellow right away...
Ring DNA? Cool! But doesn't it need and end to begin translation and
transcription?
--
David Fontaine <dav### [at] faricynet> ICQ 55354965
Please visit my website: http://www.faricy.net/~davidf/
Post a reply to this message
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"David Fontaine" <dav### [at] faricynet> wrote :
> Ring DNA? Cool! But doesn't it need and end to begin translation and
> transcription?
Should only need a marker, think 4D...
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Ian Witham wrote:
>
> Oops I didn't realise it was so many KB -- sorry all.
Hi,
the files size is well balanced by your sens of humour ! ;-)
Denis.
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Mmmm... Looks like candy... Crunch... Mmmmm... Sorry hope you still have
the code for that one... =) <Genome w/ a big byte>
Ian Witham wrote:
> Having recently completed the first stage of the ground breaking David
> Fontaine Genome Project, I thought I would share a sample of his DNA ;-)
> Apologies to Crick and Watson.
>
> --
>
> Ian
>
> Inkwell: Ian's Homepage
> http://www.topcities.com/cartoon/inkwell/index.htm
>
> [Image]
>
> [Image]
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> Tee-hee!
> Hmm, in real DNA, one nitrogen base is always opposite another (eg
> red<->green blue<->yellow) so the two strands are ocmplimentary.
> But, where does the enzyme begin transcription and how does the RNA enter
> the ribosome? :)
Thus the apologies to Crick and Watson for my complete bastardisation of the
genetic code ;-P
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> don't we need four colors for a "real" DNA? I can only see red green and
> blue.
Hmmm... look again my friend.
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