Molecular Half-Lives: Why Temporal Decay Challenges the Proof of Common Ancestry
The pursuit of tracing the "Tree of Life" back to a single common ancestor relies heavily on the assumption that biological information is preserved across eons. However, the physical reality of biochemical decay presents a significant hurdle for the evolutionary model. When we examine the hard limits of DNA preservation and the even shorter lifespan of epigenetic modifications, the "molecular trail" required to prove common ancestry beyond a certain point becomes effectively invisible. The One-Million-Year Barrier for DNA DNA is often treated as an eternal blueprint, but in reality, it is a fragile organic molecule subject to hydrolysis and oxidation. Research into the "half-life" of DNA—most notably studies on Moa bones and ancient permafrost samples—suggests that even under ideal, freezing conditions, DNA becomes completely unreadable long before the multi-million-year timescales required by the Modern Synthesis. The Problem of Deep Time Gap...