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Skeleton Shatters Long-Held Theory
Reuters ^
Posted on 12/11/2002 10:32:02 AM PST by thesharkboy
LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists have found the remains of a man who died of tuberculosis more than 2,200 years ago, shattering theories the deadly disease was brought to England by the conquering armies of ancient Rome.
The Iron Age skeleton was found in a pit in the tiny village of Tarrant Hinton in southwest England.
His damaged spine led scientists to suspect he was a tuberculosis victim and DNA tests confirmed it.
Carbon dating shows he lived between 400 and 230 BC, long before Julius Caesar launched Rome's first tentative invasion of Britain in 55 BC.
"It's tremendously important," said Simon Mays, a human skeletal biologist working for English Heritage.
"It tells us that TB wasn't brought here by the Romans," he told Reuters. "Presumably it was imported via trading contacts with the continent during the prehistoric period."
'TB man' was found during an excavation more than 20 years ago and has lived quietly in a museum in the sleepy village of Wimborne, near his burial site, ever since.
TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: ancientautopsies; england; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; helixmakemineadouble; ironage; roman; romanempire; simonmays; skeleton; tarranthinton; tb; tuberculosis; wimborne
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'TB man' was found during an excavation more than 20 years ago and has lived quietly in a museum in the sleepy village of Wimborne, near his burial site, ever since. I thought he was dead. BTW, how would you like to be known throughout history as "TB Man"?
To: thesharkboy
I thought he was dead. He faked his death and is now a groundskeeper for Elvis.
2
posted on
12/11/2002 10:34:58 AM PST
by
VadeRetro
To: PatrickHenry; Junior; general_re; balrog666; longshadow; js1138
Ancient TB ping!
3
posted on
12/11/2002 10:36:31 AM PST
by
VadeRetro
To: thesharkboy
I bet he is still listed as active on the Palm Beach voter rolls.
4
posted on
12/11/2002 10:39:09 AM PST
by
AppyPappy
To: thesharkboy
Dang. Guess I lost that bet. Stupid Romans... Ok, who wants to take influenza in the Iberian Peninsula plus five points?
5
posted on
12/11/2002 10:40:28 AM PST
by
linear
To: thesharkboy
TB man Sounds like a villain from the X-Files.
To: thesharkboy
BTW, how would you like to be known throughout history as "TB Man"? It could be worse. Think "Monica Lewinsky."
To: thesharkboy
'TB man' was found during an excavation more than 20 years ago and has lived quietly in a museum..."lived quietly"!!??
I thought this guy was dead!
8
posted on
12/11/2002 10:48:32 AM PST
by
Gritty
To: thesharkboy
"BTW, how would you like to be known throughout history as "TB Man"?" This guy does not mind
Cheddar Man
9
posted on
12/11/2002 10:49:02 AM PST
by
blam
To: Gritty
He is just pining for the fjords :)
10
posted on
12/11/2002 11:12:32 AM PST
by
xp38
To: blam
Oxford University scientists announced Friday that Adrian Targett, 42, a history teacher in the town of Cheddar in southwest England, shares a common ancestor with Cheddar Man. This gives new meaning to the "Old Boy Network."
11
posted on
12/11/2002 11:18:53 AM PST
by
Cicero
To: VadeRetro
I didn't know TB was blamed on the Romans. "ED" yes, TB, news to me.
To: thesharkboy
"I thought he was dead. BTW, how would you like to be known throughout history as "TB Man"?"
I thought old Shakespeare stareted it all: "TB or not TB, that is the question."
13
posted on
12/11/2002 11:44:56 AM PST
by
Macklew
To: thesharkboy
His damaged spine led scientists to suspect he was a tuberculosis victim and DNA tests confirmed it.
How can DNA tests confirm that somebody died from TB???
14
posted on
12/11/2002 12:15:03 PM PST
by
Xenon481
To: Xenon481
Isn't the point that he HAD TB?
15
posted on
12/11/2002 3:46:46 PM PST
by
gcruse
To: gcruse
Isn't the point that he HAD TB?
But how can DNA tests confirm that somebody even HAD TB?
TB is not a genetic disorder as far as I have heard.
16
posted on
12/13/2002 6:47:20 AM PST
by
Xenon481
To: Xenon481
Seems to me I recall reading that certain forms/stages of TB can leaving scarring on the skeleton.
17
posted on
12/13/2002 6:52:40 AM PST
by
mewzilla
To: mewzilla
Seems to me I recall reading that certain forms/stages of TB can leaving scarring on the skeleton.
Right, I've heard of that, but they state that they used DNA testing to confirm that he had TB.
But, I've never heard of TB modifying human DNA strands in such a way as to be identifiable through DNA testing.
18
posted on
12/13/2002 7:54:51 AM PST
by
Xenon481
To: Xenon481
"But, I've never heard of TB modifying human DNA strands in such a way as to be identifiable through DNA testing." It doesn't. What they probably detected was the DNA residue of the TB bacterium itself in the tissues.
To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...
This topic was posted , thanks thesharkboy.
20
posted on
04/10/2023 11:45:55 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(NeverTrumpers are Republicans the same way Liz Cheney is a Republican.)
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