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Rear-gunner OP t1_j4zaxak wrote

The article raises the question of whether the bubonic form of the plague relied on slow-moving rodents for transmission or if it could spread more efficiently through direct human contact through ectoparasites or respiratory and touch transmission.

Another possibility is birds

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LightsoutSD t1_j4zpiuj wrote

I always assumed that after the fleas from rodents introduced it into a population, it would then spread through human contact.

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Rear-gunner OP t1_j4zqogw wrote

This is what most believe.

Black death is different than other plagues in that it spread very rapidly as such some like me think it needs a different vector than rats.

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LightsoutSD t1_j4zthns wrote

To spread so rapidly you’d think it would have to be from people coughing on each other, or drinking from the same ladle or something. Very odd.

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Rear-gunner OP t1_j4zywnm wrote

Black Death travelled much faster than any spread of Yersinia pestis we know about not only that it spread much wider.

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LightsoutSD t1_j4zzk1d wrote

How does it compare to smallpox in that regard?

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Rear-gunner OP t1_j504kxv wrote

Not sure unlike plague. Smallpox was always there so it would be interesting to see a study of the America's after the Spanish came.maybe someone here can help us out?

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abandoningeden t1_j50dnx1 wrote

At the time most European houses had thatched roofs. What I learned in a class on plagued was that that rats brought it into houses of people who were isolating themselves from other people via the roofs they lived in and spread from country to country with rat infested ships docking and the rats getting off even though the people were turned away..not that it didn't spread through human contact too...

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Rear-gunner OP t1_j50i6is wrote

The problem is that the Black Death's expansion was faster than the rats' travel. If you look at the plague in India in the late 1800s, it spread much slower.

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Colosseros t1_j520l89 wrote

No, that's not a problem. Pulmonary infections of yersinias pestis can take a much longer time to gestate than when it's introduced to the blood. You can travel, symptomless for a week, breathing on people and spreading it. That's it. There's no mystery here. People traveled much faster than the rats. For example, on the back of a horse, which would also be a carrier, as a mammal. The rats never needed to migrate to get it done. They didn't even need to arrive by ship once it jumped to humans. Because of how much time humans spend with each other, and other mammals.

All you need for an outbreak is a sudden decline in the rat population, which then results in the fleas jumping to other species at much greater number. Fleas don't really care what they bite. It's just that rats live like humans in swarms, piled on top of each other. So rat blood is just the most widely available, and widely accessible food source... until it isn't. So really, when they try to make a point about the climate suggesting the opposite of what we see in the historical record, they're shooting themselves in the foot while missing the elephant in the room. It's not strange at all that conditions that would stress the rat population would result in higher transmission to humans. It would also result in higher transmission to dogs, cats, sheep, pigs, donkeys, horses, cows, etc... You know. The list of all the animals humans spend the most time with.

It vectored towards us because we were what was available. And when it figured out how to infect our bronchial sacks, it really spread like wildfire. Think about it. Humans are built to spread pathogens by breath. Especially in a world where the literacy rate is in the single digits, and there is no mass communication.

News traveled by word of mouth.

Read that sentence again. That's the elephant in the room. If a town found out about a neighboring town being afflicted with plague, that necessarily meant that someone traveled in person to say it, and breathed on people to do it. That's it. There's no mystery.

edit: spelling

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