I have never admitted fossils of only thousands of years old ought to contain abundant amounts of DNA - remember, that was your assumption that you keep bringing up in defense of your position, I can quote you the post numbers where you've brought this up if necessary. What I did indicate is that if DNA was found, there are no mechanisms supporting its survival of tens of millions of years... the fact that it is found in bones of only thousands of years is still incredible, and should be very rare.
In the references I've made, it has been suggested as being a step closer towards a "Jurassic park", as an eye-catching headline only. There is no technology to resurrect extinct species I am aware of, hence why animals that have recently gone extinct have not been resurrected. The argument a Jurassic park would have been replicated years ago (as the only logical conclusion of DNA being found in dinosaur fossils) is based on... what?
You have successfully convinced everyone you've come across here on CF you don't believe in biblical creation... we all believe you. If you don't like evidence that supports a biblical creation, you may find better success discussing with folks like M. H. Schweitzer, et al., who keep turning this stuff up rather than, frustratingly discussing with people who, how do you put it... struggle dribbling let alone shoot 3-pointers?
Based on our current knowledge, my statement that fossils of only a few thousand years should contain DNA, is accurate.
And, regarding the Jurassic park statement, its with regards to sequencing of a dinosaur genome, or uncovering DNA.
Still, you are just avoiding the reality that if dinosaurs did in fact live just a few thousand years ago, it wouldnt be a complicated matter, finding DNA amongst the thousands of fossils we have.
Regarding your rebuttal, there is no research that demonstrates the ultimate limitations to the preservation of DNA over time. I even posted an article with scientists discussing the very fact that it is unknown how long DNA could ultimately last under varying scenarios of preservation. Their research was implemented in an attempt to answer this unknown question.
Also, even if hypothetically DNA were found in the T rex, it would still be unlikely to change anything with respect to our understanding of the old earth, just because this particular specimen has been exceptionally well preserved, as recognized by the woman who published research on it.
Regardless, while our side can be flexible and can accept either scenario (DNA is found or not), here we are still...with no DNA. Which for YECs, is an issue if all of these organisms allegedly were alive just a few thousand years ago.
Imagine...if these organisms were really just a few thousand years old, every single young earther, Ken Ham and Hovind and all those guys, they would be rushing to get DNA from these dinosaurs. The truth is, it would have been done decades ago. But it hasnt, which is telling of the reality that these fossils are far older than just a few thousand years.
Mummies are like a few thousand years old, and they have DNA, they have degraded skin still. Bandages, with plenty of organic material. But go look at a devonian tetrapod. The thing looks like its made of stone, its clearly ancient.
Go look at archaeological sites of native americans from a few thousand years ago. You can literally go outside with a shovel, and dig through soft soils to find this stuff. They might be 10 feet underground. But go and try to use a shovel to dig out a dinosaur fossils. You wont get far because dinosaurs arent contained in soft soils as thousand year old mummies or native american artifacts are.
This is why archaeologists and paleontologists have two separate lines of practice and methods of investigation. Its because they look at things that are temporally, completely different from one another and the environments in which work is performed by each, are completely different.