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Mummy lice, American deseases and human migration

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    Posted: 10-Feb-2008 at 00:48
An amazing article from the University of Florida I just found in another forum.
 
It is the first proof that the theory of the diseaseas depopulating the Americas... may be wrong! In fact, there is also some few evidences that other illnesses, besides typhus, existed in the Americas before Europeans came!
 
I hope it opens a discusion in here,
 
Pinguin
 
 
 

Mummy lice found in Peru may give new clues about human migration

Filed under Research, Natural History, Sciences on Thursday, February 7, 2008.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. Lice from 1,000-year-old mummies in Peru may unravel important clues about a different sort of passage: the migration patterns of Americas earliest humans, a new University of Florida study suggests.

Its kind of quirky that a parasite we love to hate can actually inform us how we traveled around the globe, said David Reed, an assistant curator of mammals at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus and one of the studys authors.

DNA sequencing found the strain of lice to be genetically the same as the form of body lice that spawns several deadly diseases, including typhus, which was blamed for the loss of Napoleons grand army and millions of other soldiers, he said.

The discovery of these parasites on 11th-century Peruvian mummies proves they were infesting the native Americans nearly 500 years before Europeans arrived, Reed said. His findings are published this week in an online edition of the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

This definitely goes against the grain of conventional thought that all diseases were transmitted from the Old World to the New World at the time of Columbus, he said.

It came as a surprise to Reed and his research team that the type of lice on the mummies was of the same genetic type as those found as far away as the highlands of Papua, New Guinea, instead of the form of head lice that is widespread in the Western Hemisphere, Reed said. This latter version, the bane of many school children, accounts for more than half the cases of lice that appear in the United States, Canada and Central America, he said.

Given its abundance in the Americas on living humans, we thought for sure that this form of lice was the one that was here all along and had been established in the New World with the first peoples, he said.

We hope to be able to understand human migration patterns by investigating their parasites since people have carried these parasites with them as they moved around the globe, he said. Called a parascript, its a whole other transcript of our evolutionary history that can either add to what we know or in some cases inform us about things we didnt know.

Looking at evidence from parasites perspectives, for example, may yield valuable clues about when the first Americans arrived on the continent and which route they took, Reed said. Building upon this DNA sequencing work, scientists may be able to link the 1,000-year-old lice found in the Western Hemisphere with those in Siberia or Mongolia, confirming existing theories that Americas earliest residents originated there, he said.

Had these immigrants traveled by land masses, there was a very small window of time, about 13,000 years ago, when the glaciers retreated enough to allow passage through the Bering Strait on the way to South America, Reed said. Another proposed theory is a seafaring route, but this would have required sophisticated oceangoing vessels for which no evidence from the time exists, he said.

Being able to chart these early migration patterns would give insight into how these early immigrants lived, Reed said. If youre skirting the edge of glaciers, its obviously a very cold time period and humans would have needed certain creature comforts just to stay alive, such as tight clothing to maintain warmth, he said.

Today, the people who dont have the opportunity to change their clothes are the ones at risk for epidemic typhus, which along with the lesser-known diseases of relapsing fever and trench fever are carried by body lice, Reed said. These pests lay their eggs in clothing fibers and washing the clothes is all it takes to get rid of them, he said.

The disease pops up primarily in refugees who have been displaced from their homeland with the clothes on their backs and nothing else, he said. Theyre living in crowded conditions where hygiene is poor.

Reed said he hopes the teams lice research might someday increase human understanding of typhus by pinpointing where the disease originated.

Studying parasites to learn about their hosts history has been around for only about 20 years, Reed said. By looking at things like tapeworms, pinworms, lice or bedbugs that humans have carried around for at least tens of thousands of years, and in some cases millions of years, he said, we can learn much more about human evolutionary history.

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