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![]() >>>As climate change leads to rapidly melting permafrost in the Russian tundra, a recent find has scientists worried that trouble may be lurking below. A 30,000 year old virus of unprecedented size has been found and reactivated.
The virus, dubbed Pithovirus Sibericum, appears to affect amoebas and not human or mouse cells. Named after the Greek word, "pithos," meaning a large earthenware jar, it was discovered by a group of researchers from Aix-Marseille University. The virus, which is so large it can be seen under an optical microscope, was found in a 98-foot-deep sample of permafrost near the East Siberia Sea, where the average annual temperature is 7 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the Agence France-Presse. The group's new discovery raises the frightening possibility that more harmful pathogens could potentially be revived. Perhaps, it could be something no human has ever encountered before, researchers say.<<< http://www.cbsnews.com/news/ancient-...cientists-say/ ![]() |
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![]() 98 feet of ice = no human has ever encountered before.
that's the assumption that undermines the "frightening possibility". stop with the anti-bactiarial soap people. you're just undermining the possibility of your great great great great great great (you get the point) grandchild surviving a plague. |