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Plague:Ancient Teeth Reveal Where Black Death Began, Researchers Say
1970-01-01

Researchers believe they have discovered the origins of the Black Death, more than 600 years after it killed tens of millions in Europe, Asia and north Africa.

The mid-14th Century health catastrophe is one of the most significant disease episodes in human history.

But despite years of research, scientists had been unable to pinpoint where the bubonic plague began.

Now analysis suggests it was in Kyrgyzstan, central Asia, in the 1330s.

A research team from the University of Stirling in Scotland and Germany's Max Planck Institute and University of Tubingen analysed ancient DNA samples from the teeth of skeletons in cemeteries near Lake Issyk Kul, in Kyrgyzstan.

They chose the area after noting a significant spike in burials there in 1338 and 1339

Dr Philip Slavin, a historian at the University of Stirling, said of the discovery: "Our study puts to rest one of the biggest and most fascinating questions in history and determines when and where the single most notorious and infamous killer of humans began."

The research does have some limitations - including the small sample size.

Dr Michael Knapp from the University of Otago in New Zealand, who was not involved in the work, praised it as "really valuable", but noted: "Data from far more individuals, times and regions... would really help clarify what the data presented here really means."

The researchers' work was published in the journal Nature, titled "The source of the Black Death in fourteenth-century central Eurasia".

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