Submitted by CaptainHindsight92 t3_yyj4wd in askscience
I know with some animals you can look at the fossil record, but don't modern methods use DNA? How can we be sure given that generation times and rates of evolution vary massively between species? Thanks.
Chance_Bluebird_5788 t1_iwulvth wrote
The most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of any two extant species today are all dead. The theory of common descent says there was a MRCA of any two living organisms today, so the question is just what can we say about that MRCA, and with what level of confidence.
If we find a fossil that looks like a good candidate for the the MRCA, then we can use various radioactive dating methods or existing knowledge about the layer or environment it was found in to help estimate it's age.
The DNA method you're referring to works roughly by taking an estimate of how quickly mutations happen, seeing how different the DNA between the extant species is, and dividing the amount of change by the estimated rate of change to estimate a divergence date.
However, at the end of the day you're right, these are the best estimates we can come up with, and there is certainly a margin of error that's bigger or smaller based on the amount of info we have to work with.