Thanks for the replies!
Yeah... so ancient is a no go anyway.
But I imagine bones that are just 1 or 2 centuries old will be significantly less problematic to work with, yes? And I will be working with human bone - probably a femur, maybe a tibia, and it should have some marrow leftover inside. Also, I hope to have access to basic lab stuff like PCR materials, electrophoresis stuff, other chemicals, etc.
I'm actually hoping to simulate aging/degradation by the environment by storing fragments of the bone in different extreme conditions (vary mineral content of water, try wet soil, dry sand, maybe some different pHs) and I'm hoping to figure out someway to see how those conditions effects the condition of the dna I can extract from it. Not too sure about what kind of tests I could do to objectively observe dna quality, but I'm planning to talk with one of my professors soon about this and other stuff.
DNA contamination is also a concern, esp. for the ones that might be stored in bacterially hospitable conditions (like wet soil) so I think purification of whatever dna I do obtain will also be a concern.
Last edited by Jaejoongfangirl on 02 Dec 2011, 2:17 am, edited 1 time in total.