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Livestock played a role in prehistoric plague infections, genomic study finds

WESTERN EURASIAN STEPPE, RUSSIA, AUG 11 – The study reveals domesticated sheep carried a prehistoric plague strain closely linked to human infections in Bronze Age Eurasian pastoralist societies, highlighting animal roles in disease spread.

  • In Cell on August 11, 2025, researchers reported a 4,000-year-old domesticated sheep at Arkaim yielded the first prehistoric Y. pestis genome, linking livestock to ancient plague spillover.
  • Originating around 5,000 years ago, the Late Neolithic Bronze Age lineage of Yersinia pestis infected humans for nearly 3,000 years before vanishing, genetically distinct from the Black Death.
  • Researchers found that ancient sheep and humans carried nearly identical Y. pestis strains, both with the same LNBA lineage, indicating shared infection sources.
  • However, researchers hypothesize that some questions about transmission and the unknown reservoir remain unanswered as the search in ancient animal remains is only just beginning.
  • Future research may explore how animal domestication and Bronze Age herding increased contact with wild plague reservoirs, impacting zoonotic disease spread.
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Sheep helped spread early form of the plague thousands of years ago

The ancient plague has been identified in an animal for the first time.

Cattle played a greater role in the spread of the plague in the Bronze Age than previously known. However, there must have been another source

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Phys.org broke the news in United Kingdom on Monday, August 11, 2025.
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