Archaeologists disagree.
Carl Zimmer, Tuberculosis Is Newer Than Thought, Study Says; Tracing a disease’s oriin back less than 6,000 years ago. New York Times, Aug 21, 2014.
Quote:
(a) “Some scientists have argued that tuberculosis spread from cows to humans when the animals were first domesticated 10,000 years ago. Others have argued that the disease is far older, having evolved about 70,000 years ago, and spread from humans to cows and other animals.
(b) “Before this new study [published yesterday on Nature], the oldest tuberculosis genome [retrieved from humans] was reconstructed from a woman who died in Hungary in 1797.
(c) “The Peruvian [TB] genomes held two surprises.
“The scientists expected that the [Peruvian] tuberculosis DNA would be closely related to some particular strain of the disease. Instead, they found that it was mostly closely related to animal strains [particularly those found only in seals]. The second surprise came [from the 6,000-year estimation]
(d) Helen Donoghue, an expert on ancient DNA at the University College London “pointed to fossil evidence suggesting tuberculosis is far older than 6,000 years. In Israel, for example, archaeologists have found 9,000-year-old human remains that contain molecules produced by the [TB] bacteria. In a Wyoming cave, they have found 17,000-year-old bison bones with similar markers.
My comment: There is no need to read the rest of the NY Times report.
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