Posted on 04/12/2002 5:43:45 AM PDT by blam
Black Death 'was not plague' say experts
The Black Death may not have been caused by bubonic plague after all, say US scientists.
They have been looking at church records from the 14th century to find out how the disease spread.
They now think it was probably some other infection passed on by human contact and not bubonic plague which relies on flea-ridden rats.
Records show the disease spread along busy roads and rivers and over natural barriers which would have restricted rats.
They also say there are other diseases with similar symptoms which are more likely candidates.
The modern version of the plague usually occurs when there is an increase in the number of rat deaths - something not recorded during the 1300s.
Experts at Penn State University say an ancestor of bubonic plague might have been responsible, but if so it has evolved into something very different.
Bubonic plague was first suggested as the cause of the Black Death by 19th century doctors.
But Penn State's Dr James Wood said: "This disease appears to spread too rapidly among humans to be something that must first be established in wild rodent populations, like bubonic plague.
"An analysis of priests' monthly mortality rates during the epidemic shows a 45-fold greater risk of death than during normal times, a level of mortality far higher than usually associated with bubonic plague."
Story filed: 13:23 Friday 12th April 2002
My quibble with this is that I doubt that this(a rat dieoff) would be considered of great importance at the time and that the records we have are no where near as complete as you would think.
I am not saying that they are wrong but that I think that this is a far to flimsy hook to hang this theory on.
a. cricket
My quibble with this is that I doubt that this(a rat dieoff) would be considered of great importance at the time and that the records we have are no where near as complete as you would think.
I am not saying that they are wrong but that I think that this is a far to flimsy hook to hang this theory on.
a. cricket
Sorry for the double post
I promise I only hit the button once.
a. cricket
a. cricket
It is these same barriers that have, for centuries now, have restricted rats from...where?
You would think someone who spends so much lab time with rats would not so pathetically underestimate them.
This was the age of exploration, who knows what African/Asian disease was aboard that ship to Italy (It was Italy wasn't it?)?
EBUCK
Not sure. Doesn't seem to affect the DNA but, I don't know about such things.
Bog mummies are 1000, or more, years older than when the black death occurred.
Oops. Not so sure about that one. (Will you file this in the Gods, Graves, Glyphs section? I don't know how, thanks)
I was afraid that that was the case. (There must be something somewhere we could check, huh?)
Perhaps? (We are the ancestors of the survivors of this plague, so presumably we have some immunity.)
Back then, people often had fleas too.
-Eric
EBUCK
Thanks. I'd appreciate it.
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