Loading...
Loading...
Browse all stories on DeepNewz
VisitRegion with highest number of ancient malaria cases by end of 2024?
Neolithic Germany • 25%
Chalcolithic Iberia • 25%
Bronze Age Balkans and Sardinia • 25%
Iron Age sites in Italy and Austria • 25%
Scientific publications and genomic studies in major journals
Scientists Reconstruct Ancient Malaria Genomes to Trace Origins and Spread, Published in Nature
Jun 12, 2024, 05:34 PM
Scientists have successfully reconstructed the ancient genomes of the two most deadly malaria parasites, Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum, to trace their origins and spread. The study, published in Nature, reveals that these parasites were present in geographically disparate regions of Eurasia from as early as the fourth and first millennia BCE. The research includes samples from infected ancient individuals from Neolithic Germany, Chalcolithic Iberia, Bronze Age Balkans and Sardinia, as well as Iron Age sites in Italy and Austria. This discovery sheds light on the long history shared between humans and the Plasmodium parasite, which infects blood cells and causes malaria. The study is also highlighted by the Harvard Gazette.
View original story
Africa • 25%
Europe • 25%
Asia • 25%
Americas • 25%
South America • 25%
Asia • 25%
Europe • 25%
Africa • 25%
Government grant • 25%
Private foundation • 25%
University funding • 25%
Corporate sponsorship • 25%
Before 2000 BCE • 25%
2000 BCE to 1000 BCE • 25%
1000 BCE to 0 CE • 25%
After 0 CE • 25%
North America • 25%
Europe • 25%
Asia • 25%
Australia • 25%
Oncology • 25%
Archaeology • 25%
History of Medicine • 25%
Anthropology • 25%
USA • 20%
China • 20%
India • 20%
Brazil • 20%
Germany • 20%
Widely included • 33%
Occasionally referenced • 33%
Rarely referenced • 34%
Science • 25%
Cell • 25%
Nature • 25%
The Lancet • 25%