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the plague bacteria :: Article Creator Ancestor Of Black Death Has Been Discovered In Bronze-Age Sheep Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.Generate Key Takeaways An ancestor of the bacteria responsible for plague has been found in the tooth of a sheep that lived nearly 4,000 years ago in a Bronze Age human settlement, scientists report in a new preprint study. Millennia later, the apparent descendants of this pathogen would unleash vicious pandemics that claimed millions of human lives, including the 6th-century Justinian plague and the 14th-century Black Death. In tracing the backstories of diseases like plague, this new research highlights the importance of looking not just at ancient human remains, but also the animals around them, the authors say. Most human pathogens have zoonotic origins, a...

“Coronavirus Has Europe Treating Chinese People Like the Plague - The Daily Beast” plus 1 more

“Coronavirus Has Europe Treating Chinese People Like the Plague - The Daily Beast” plus 1 more


Coronavirus Has Europe Treating Chinese People Like the Plague - The Daily Beast

Posted: 31 Jan 2020 10:12 AM PST

ROME—The sign taped to the glass door of a popular gelateria in front of Rome's iconic Trevi Fountain is perfectly clear, and perfectly ugly. Written in both Chinese and English, it states what pretty much everyone in a country of hypochondriacs and the rest of Europe is thinking: "Due to international safety measures, all people coming from China are not allowed to have access to this place." The writer then apologizes for any inconvenience. 

Worst Outbreaks of All Time - 24/7 Wall St.

Posted: 31 Jan 2020 11:27 AM PST

Since the rapidly spreading novel coronavirus was first identified last year in China in Wuhan — a city of 11 million residents that is larger than any city in the United States — it has infected nearly 10,000 people on four continents, including six in the United States. As of the end of January, over 200 people around the world had died of the virus.

The U.S. Department of State issued on Jan. 30 the highest level travel advisory, warning Americans to not travel to any part of China, citing the World Health Organization's determination that the outbreak constitutes a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

As of Jan. 31, numerous vaccines, treatments, and diagnostic methods for coronavirus were in development, but developing an effective vaccine or treatment will likely take at least several more months.

Chinese authorities have accepted aid from the WHO in responding to the crisis. Authorities have enforced a quarantine of 50 million people living near the epicenter of the virus — the largest known quarantine in human history.

While the coronavirus outbreak is without a doubt one of the most serious international public health emergencies in recent memory, it is unlikely to come close to the devastation wrought by some of history's worst outbreaks.

From the time of the pharaohs to the present day, epidemics of diseases like the bubonic plague, cholera, influenza, and smallpox have had a cataclysmic impact on civilizations. These scourges changed history, accelerated the decline of empires, decimated armies, and molded cultures.

To provide some historical context, 24/7 Wall St. has compiled a list of the worst outbreaks of all time.

Click here to see the 20 worst outbreaks of all time

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