Trench Fever and Plague in 14th Century France
Five Skeletons from Bondy, France. (Source: Tran et al, 2011a) The Marseille plague group has been suggesting for some time now that human lice could be a major vector of medieval plague. To test their...
View ArticleLice, Ancient DNA, and Napoleon’s Grand Army
Identification of human body lice. (Raoult et al, 2006) Life in Napoleon’s Grand Army wasn’t always so grand. The Russian campaign was a disaster, recently most tangibly manifest in the mass grave...
View ArticleTrench Fever in German Mass Burial
Trench fever seems to be all the rage these days in paleomicrobiology. It seems as though every time Bartonella quintana is added to a panel of pathogens for aDNA screening its found at some level. So...
View ArticleTrench Fever: An Ancient Zoonosis
Rhesus macaque (Photo by J.M. Garg, CC) Trench fever is an ancient disease with a surprisingly short history. Named after its discovery in the trenches of World War I, its case history is only about a...
View ArticleThe Case for Louse-Transmitted Plague
by Michelle Ziegler The key to understanding plague — past, present, and future — has always been understanding its vector dynamics. By the latest tally, there are 269 known flea species, plus a small...
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