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7 Deadly Epidemics You Didn’t Know Existed
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I don’t want to go all John Green on you guys, but the history of humanity is full of disease.
Even when you pay attention in history class,
though, you usually only hear about a few headliner events.
You got the Black Death in the 14th century, the Spanish Flu in 1918…
…which actually was not Spanish in origin. That’s not important right now, though.
Pathogens like the influenza virus and Yersinia Pestis, the species of bacteria responsible for
bubonic plague, have caused many epidemics and pandemics that you may have never heard about.
And that’s kind of inexcusable.
So let’s break down seven of them across history,
and learn why they were every bit as awful as the famous ones.
[♪ INTRO]
First, let’s address the difference between an epidemic and a pandemic.
In general, experts use the word “epidemic” where a certain
geographic area sees an unexpected increase in cases compared to normal.
While “Pandemic” is used for skyrocketing increase over a broader population and location.
But usually there’s no clearcut threshold for the
exact number of cases that pushes an outbreak into either category.
Public health officials just have to keep an eye on the typical disease numbers in an area,
and compare what they’re observing now.
With that little lesson out of the way, let’s start with the oldest epidemic on our list,
which features a virus we know all too well.
If you’re like most of our audience, you were born before the 21st century,
and you’ve already lived through multiple coronavirus epidemics.
But unless you look very, very good for your age, you definitely did not experience the first one
Because our earliest evidence of a coronavirus epidemic dates to around 23,000 BCE in East Asia.
Now of course we do not have any first-person accounts.
But to explore our ancient past, scientists can study
our modern genetic code and kinda work backwards.
In a study published in 2021, one research team looked at over 2,500 human genomes
across 26 global populations to look for evidence of ancient coronavirus epidemics.
Specifically, they were looking for parts of the human genome that code
for certain virus-interacting proteins, or VIPs.
And like that acronym suggests, VIPs are Very Important Proteins.
But not in a good way.
For example, some are proteins on the outsides
of our cells that viruses use to attach to and infect them.
So any evidence of VIP evolution could
suggest some past viral epidemic caused the proteins to adapt.
In other words, people with VIPs that the viruses couldn’t latch onto as easily were
more likely to not die before passing their genes to the next generation.
For this study, scientists were looking specifically at VIPs that are known to
interact with coronaviruses…although that does not mean they only interact with coronavirus.
Hence my use of the word “could”.
But based on the genetic evidence, and some fancy computer models to estimate
when certain mutations must have originated, the researchers found
significant adaptation in coronavirus VIPs dating back roughly 900 generations.
They also found that most of the oldest genetic adaptations seem
to have happened in the ancestors of modern East Asian populations.
Together, the evidence suggests ancient humans in what is now East Asia probably
experienced a coronavirus epidemic somewhere around 25,000 years ago.
This is… very cool that we can find evidence for epidemics that happened
thousands of years before we could even write about them.
But learning about the evolutionary history of humans’ response to
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