The Guardian Australia

5,000-year-old hunter-gatherer is earliest person to die with the plague

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

A hunter-gatherer who lived more than 5,000 years ago is the earliest known person to have died with the plague, researcher­s have revealed.

Stone-age communitie­s in western Europe experience­d a huge population decline about 5,500 years ago, an event that is thought to have subsequent­ly enabled a huge migration of people from the east.

The plague has been posited as an explanatio­n after it was previously been found in stone-age individual­s, including a 20-year-old woman from a rural farming community in Sweden.

However, researcher­s claim their new discovery casts doubt on the idea suggesting the nature of the strain found in hunter-gatherer would have been unlikely to cause rapid spread.

“We think that these early forms of Y.pestis couldn’t really drive big outbreaks,” said Prof Ben Krause-Kyora, coauthor of the study at the Christian-Albrecht

University of Kiel, Germany.

Writing in the journal Cell Reports, Krause-Kyora and colleagues describe how they analysed ancient DNA recovered from the teeth and skull bones of four individual­s buried in a prehistori­c rubbish tip, or shell midden, at a site in Latvia called Riņņukalns.

The remains, dating to between 5,300–5,050 years ago, were from a young woman, a baby and two men, and were unearthed in two excavation­s, one in the 19th century and one just a few years ago.

The team screened the genetic material for signs of known pathogens, including Y. pestis – the bacterium that causes the plague, revealing one of the men, aged 20 to 30 years old, not only had DNA fragments, but also proteins, indicating he had died with a now-extinct form of the plague in his bloodstrea­m.

“Up to date [it is], the oldest known plague victim,” said Krause-Kyora.

Further analysis revealed the strain likely split from all other forms of Y.pestis about 7,200 years ago, making it the earliest known strain of the plague, and was clearly different from those found later in the Neolithic and bronze age.

The researcher­s added the strain lacked the gene that allowed plague to be spread by fleas.

“The flea seems to be one of the major vectors which are driving really fast distributi­on and the fast infection during the middle ages,” said KrauseKyor­a, adding black buboes, caused by infected lymph nodes, are associate with this route of spread.

Instead the team say the man could have had septicemic plague, an infection of the blood, caused by a rodent bite or pneumonic plague, which affects the lungs and is spread by droplets. While the latter is usually more virulent than bubonic plague, the team say the genetics of the early strain suggest its ability to spread may have been compromise­d.

The researcher­s also said they found high levels of Y.pestis DNA in the stone age man, suggesting he might have lived with the plague for some time and hence the disease might have been mild.

Krause-Kyora said the results – together evidence of Y.pestis in ancient population­s beyond western Europe, the rarity of stone age plague pits, and

the careful burial of the man in Latvia – suggested it was unlikely plague was to blame for the stone age population decline. Instead he backed the idea that factors such as climate change played a role.

Prof Simon Rasmussen of the University of Copenhagen, who was a co-author of research into the Swedish stone age plague victim, welcomed the new study but said it did not rule out the possibilit­y that the plague had caused a dramatic decline in the stoneage population, adding there was little evidence that stone-age strains only caused mild disease.

“The individual does in fact overlap with the Neolithic decline and very likely died from the plague infection,” he said.

“We know that large settlement­s, trade and movement happened in this period and human interactio­n is therefore still a very plausible cause of the spread of plague in Europe at this time.”

 ?? Photograph: Dominik Göldner, BGAEU, Berlin ?? The skull bones of the man buried in Riņņukalns, Latvia, around 5,000 years ago.
Photograph: Dominik Göldner, BGAEU, Berlin The skull bones of the man buried in Riņņukalns, Latvia, around 5,000 years ago.
 ?? Photograph: Dominik Göldner, BGAEU, Berlin ?? This image shows the jawbone of the man who was buried in Rinnukalns, Latvia, around 5,000 years ago.
Photograph: Dominik Göldner, BGAEU, Berlin This image shows the jawbone of the man who was buried in Rinnukalns, Latvia, around 5,000 years ago.

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