9000 Year Old TBResearchers sequence oldest traces of TB from a 9000 year old victim and her child - Writing in this week's PLoS One, scientists working amongst a series of buried settlements in Israel, which date back almost 10,000 years, have uncovered the remains of a woman buried alongside her young child. Both showed signs of having died from TB infection prompting the researchers to examine the remains for DNA traces of the disease.
The findings, published by Israel Hershkovitz and his colleagues at Tel Aviv University, are also tantalising from an anthropological perspective because they date from a time when humans were eschewing the hunter-gatherer lifestyle in favour of a more settled existence in which animals were domesticated. This close proximity between humans and animals is probably what helped to spawn a host of new diseases.
19th Oct 2008 |
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