Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Plague DNA was recovered from an adolescent boy and girl found in the same grave in Siberia. - Vladimiri Bazaliiskii Ancient DNA ...
Ancient DNA recovered from cemeteries in southeast Siberia has revealed previously unknown strains of plague that had a deadly impact on an unexpected group of people 5,500 years ago. The early plague ...
NEW YORK — Scientists have found the oldest known evidence of the plague, which sparked deadly outbreaks dating back about 5,500 years ago — some 200 years earlier than previously thought. The disease ...
Plague was already a deadly killer 5,500 years ago, long before cities, farming, or the rat-infested conditions usually linked to historic outbreaks. By analyzing ancient DNA from hunter-gatherer ...
Ancient DNA from hunter-gatherers buried near Lake Baikal in Siberia suggests there were deadly outbreaks of the plague as long as 5500 years ago. The finding runs counter to the long-standing idea ...
Plague is commonly associated with rats, crowded medieval cities, and the epidemics that swept across Europe during and after the Middle Ages. But a new study published in Nature shows that the ...
See more of our coverage in your search results. Add The New York Post on Google NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists have found the oldest known evidence of the plague, which sparked deadly outbreaks dating ...
In prehistoric graves of children in Siberia, scientists have found the world’s oldest evidence of a plague outbreak. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and ...
Discovery in Siberia suggests bacterium from raw marmots devastated hunter-gatherer tribes about 5,500 years ago The earliest evidence for an outbreak of plague has been uncovered at late stone age ...