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For the first time, archeologists and anthropologists have identified this ancient plague in an animal: a 4,000-year-old ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSN4,000-year-old sheep offers first evidence linking livestock to Bronze Age plague
A new study has decoded a mysterious plague that swept across Eurasia thousands of years ago. An ancient strain of plague ...
Researchers recovered the first Yersinia pestis bacteria genome from a Bronze Age animal. It reveals how a plague spread in ...
Researchers have identified the first evidence of the Late Neolithic Bronze Age plague in a 4,000-year-old sheep from Arkaim, ...
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The Brighterside of News on MSN4 thousand-year-old sheep DNA reveals livestock’s role in spreading Bronze Age plague
Four thousand years ago, a sheep in the Eurasian Steppe carried a lethal bacterium that once swept across continents. The ...
Sheep helped spread an early form of the plague, suggests new research. The bacterium that causes bubonic plague has been ...
Study by Max Planck Institute and partners detects the late neolithic bronze age plague strain in a 4,000-year-old Arkaim sheep, linking human and animal infections.
Traces of a psychoactive compound has been detected in the dental plaque of a Bronze Age woman buried in Thailand some 4,000 ...
But plague has surfaced many times in human history and persists today. It’s an ancient disease, as evidenced by the three Bronze Age individuals that carried it to their graves.
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