You’re incorrect. If they have isolated it then where are the samples? All they do is mix up random bits of material and pick out markers. Once you run the chain reaction there is no way to know where any of the pieces came from.
No they aren’t and you just totally dodged what I said. Because you know it’s true if you understand how PCR works. The sample is destroyed and broken down into random chains and then copies of the chains are made until there is enough to detect…. And with the variant tests it’s even worse. They combine many samples together and then “survey” the “sample pool”.
You’re incorrect. If they have isolated it then where are the samples? All they do is mix up random bits of material and pick out markers. Once you run the chain reaction there is no way to know where any of the pieces came from.
They’re reported in the GIS data. Review the ref #s as I told you
Material from? You guessed it, DNA samples. Geez you’re just stuck in a loop aren’t ya
No they aren’t and you just totally dodged what I said. Because you know it’s true if you understand how PCR works. The sample is destroyed and broken down into random chains and then copies of the chains are made until there is enough to detect…. And with the variant tests it’s even worse. They combine many samples together and then “survey” the “sample pool”.