Why Is DNA Considered Large Compared to a Hydrogen Atom?

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DNA consists of long chains made up of nucleobases: adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine. Even the smallest strands of DNA are millions of times larger than a hydrogen atom. The average strand of DNA contains essential chemical elements, primarily carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. While the human body is predominantly composed of water (H2O), it is classified as a "carbon-based" lifeform due to the fundamental role of carbon chemistry in biological processes. Water serves as a medium for these reactions and can be involved in the formation or breakdown of biological molecules.
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How large is the smallest piece of DNA compared to a hydrogen atom? What chemical elements go into the average strand of DNA? If the human body is mostly H2O, then why are we considered "carbon-based" lifeforms?
 
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1. DNA is not "one size" - it is an enormously long chain made of small building blocks: adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine. Even small strands of DNA are millions of time larger than a single atom.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nucleobase

2. See the URL above: Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen

3. All of what we are depends on carbon chemistry, water is the medium for the reactions. Sometimes water is bound up into the chemicals created or is released as a product of the reaction.
 
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