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DNA from a 4,000-year-old sheep has just solved one of archaeology’s biggest mysteries: how plague spread across Eurasia for nearly 2,000 years without fleas. The answer reveals a forgotten pandemic that may have killed millions and offers a warning that still echoes today.In December 2024, researchers studying animal remains from the Bronze Age settlement of Arkaim in southern Russia made an unprecedented discovery. Embedded in a domesticated sheep tooth was DNA from Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague. This marked the first time the ancient Late Neolithic and Bronze Age plague strain had ever been identified in a non-human animal.Until now, scientists were baffled. The Bronze Age plague lacked the genes required for flea-based transmission, yet genetic evidence showed it repeatedly caused large-scale outbreaks between 5,000 and 3,000 years ago. Populations collapsed, megasettlements were abandoned, and entire regions declined for centuries. The mechanism behind this spread remained unknown.The sheep provided the missing link.It belonged to the Sintashta culture, highly mobile Bronze Age pastoralists who revolutionized Eurasia through horse domestication, large herds, and long-distance seasonal movement. Their economy created a deadly transmission chain: plague persisted naturally in wild rodents, infected grazing livestock, and then spilled into humans through daily contact during herding, milking, butchering, and wool processing.Genetic evidence indicates this was not flea-borne bubonic plague, but pneumonic plague. It infected the lungs, spread directly between people through breath, and could kill within days. A Scandinavian family tomb in Falbygden, Sweden reveals its impact. Across six generations, researchers identified three separate plague waves. One third of the family died during active infection, matching mortality rates of the Black Death.Across western Eurasia, population models show a catastrophic 50 percent decline between 3450 and 3000 BCE. Some regions took nearly 3,000 years to recover. Relative to global population size, this Bronze Age pandemic may have been deadlier than the Spanish Flu.#BronzeAge #AncientDNA #PlagueHistory #ArchaeologyThe plague persisted for two millennia across a 5,000-kilometer range before disappearing around 1000 BCE. Genetic analysis suggests it became too specialized, evolving to survive only within mobile pastoralist systems. When those systems changed, the pathogen collapsed.This discovery reshapes our understanding of ancient disease. It confirms that livestock can act as long-distance transmission bridges and that pandemics can emerge without classic vectors. It also mirrors modern zoonotic spillovers, from COVID-19 to Ebola, driven by human expansion into wild ecosystems.That ancient sheep tooth is more than a scientific breakthrough. It is a warning, preserved in bone, about what happens when human ambition intersects with invisible biology.📚 SOURCES:- Light-Maka, I., Hermes, T.R., et al. (2024). “Yersinia pestis genome from a Bronze Age sheep.” Cell. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2024.11.034- Seersholm, F.V., Sikora, M., et al. (2024). “Repeated plague infections across six generations.” Nature. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07651-2- Rascovan, N., Sjögren, K.G., et al. (2018). “Emergence and spread of basal lineages during Neolithic decline.” Cell, 176(1-2), 295-305.- Spyrou, M.A., Tukhbatova, R.I., et al. (2018). “Analysis of 3800-year-old Yersinia pestis genomes.” Nature Communications, 9(1), 2234.- Anthony, D.W. (2007). “The Horse, the Wheel, and Language.” Princeton University Press.- Librado, P., Khan, N., et al. (2021). “Origins and spread of domestic horses.” Nature, 598, 634-640.- Shennan, S., et al. (2013). “Regional population collapse in mid-Holocene Europe.” Nature Communications, 4, 2486.- Wolfe, N.D., et al. (2007). “Origins of major human infectious diseases.” Nature, 447, 279-283.
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