Skip to content
The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Title

Name

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Mindanao
  • Visayas
  • National
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • International
  • SciTech
  • Health & Wellness
  • Sports
  • About Us
    • Regional Advertising Rates
    • Contact Us
    • Profile
  • Home
  • International
  • Black Death bubonic plague strain kept killing Europeans for centuries – CBC News
  • Featured
  • International
  • Technology

Black Death bubonic plague strain kept killing Europeans for centuries – CBC News

Editor January 26, 2016

The Black Death strain of bubonic plague that killed 50 million people in Europe during the 14th century didn’t disappear after the pandemic ended. It kept on killing Europeans, on a smaller scale, for centuries after the end of the original pandemic, two new studies show.

Black Death wiped out about half the population of the Continent between 1347 and 1351.

DNA analysis previously confirmed that the pandemic was caused by a virulent strain of Yersinia pestis, the bacteria that cause bubonic plague.

Since then, a huge number of distinct strains of the plague have been identified in rodents in Central Asia. Those discoveries had led scientists to suggest that outbreaks of bubonic plague in Europe over the next few centuries were caused by new strains being introduced via trade routes such as the Silk Road.

But an analysis of bacterial DNA in teeth from victims of a plague outbreak in Marseilles, France, in 1722, found they were not infected with new strains of plague. Instead, they were killed by descendants of the Black Death strain, reports a group of Canadian, German, U.S., French and Australian researchers in a paper published late last week in the journal eLife.

“That was a big surprise,” said Hendrik Poinar, an associate professor and director of the Ancient DNA Centre at McMaster University, who co-authored the study. It was led by Kirsten Bos at the University of Tubingen.

Another study released earlier this month analyzed plague DNA in the teeth of people who died of the plague in Germany in the 17th century and found it belonged to the same strain that killed people in a different part of Germany during the 14th century.

“They’re all nearly identical or identical,” said Holger Scholz, senior scientist at the Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology in Munich, who co-authored the paper published in PLOS ONE.

New pandemics of other diseases, such as influenza, are often started by new strains introduced from animals and carried along travel routes.

And a previous bubonic plague pandemic, the Plague of Justinian during Roman times, was caused by a strain distinct from the Black Death. The new findings suggest that the Black Death was hiding somewhere in Europe for centuries, re-emerging from time to time, and scientists still don’t know whether it was in the soil, in animals or elsewhere.

Mysterious disappearance

Poinar added, “That brings up the followup million-dollar question: Why did it disappear?”

The bubonic plague hasn’t been seen in Europe since the end of the 18th century.

However, bacterial descendants of the Black Death have caused recent outbreaks in the U.S.and Madagascar, along with one that hit Hong Kong in the late 1800s.

Apparently, new Asian strains didn’t come down the Silk Road into Europe as thought. Instead, after devastating Europe for centuries, the Black Death went back up the Silk Road.

“What we continue to see is Black Death is really responsible for the bulk of plague epidemics over the past 700 years,” Poinar said.

The researchers in the two groups used two different techniques to identify the Black Death strain.

Poinar and his colleagues used Y. Pestis DNA sequences to fish out the entire genome found in the plague victims.

Scholz and his colleagues used a technique that looks for DNA mutations in 19 positions that vary depending on the strain of bacteria.

Poinar said that because the DNA fragments in that technique are smaller, it’s a less reliable technique for positively identifying different strains.

Scholz disagrees, but is pleased that both studies show similar results.

“We now have two publications telling the same. That’s good.”

Poinar said he is now working to confirm whether the same strain was responsible for plague outbreaks in other parts of Europe.(Emily Chung, CBC News)

Link: http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/black-death-strain-1.3418699

fb-share-icon
Tweet 20

Continue Reading

Previous: Two Chinese nationals killed in suspected bomb blast in Laos – Asia Times
Next: Haiti Leaders Seek Way out of Political Crisis – ABC News

Related News

Xiaomi_MD1
  • Business
  • Technology

Xiaomi’s Mother’s Day Super Deals: Spoil Mom with Savings!

Editor May 8, 2025
Ursula-von-der-Leyen
  • International

EU to ban all Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027, says von der Leyen

Editor May 7, 2025
India-Pakistan War
  • International

3 civilians killed in Jammu and Kashmir in cross-border firing by Pakistan: Indian Army

Editor May 7, 2025

Trending News

DTI backs wearables, homestyle enterprises in Davao Oriental Anna-Rosal-Verga 1

DTI backs wearables, homestyle enterprises in Davao Oriental

May 20, 2025
Two new Begonia species discovered in Davao Oriental Begonia1 2

Two new Begonia species discovered in Davao Oriental

May 20, 2025
Tourism driving change in Isabela City de Basilan basilan 3

Tourism driving change in Isabela City de Basilan

May 20, 2025
Filipinos in Hong Kong warned against offers of surrogacy jobs DMW-logo 4

Filipinos in Hong Kong warned against offers of surrogacy jobs

May 20, 2025
PH scores record P1.18-B sales leads at Arabian Travel Market 2025 TPB2 5

PH scores record P1.18-B sales leads at Arabian Travel Market 2025

May 20, 2025
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Blog
Copyright © 2025. The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper. All Rights Reserved.