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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!mrccrc!mdiffin
- From: mdiffin@crc.ac.uk (Dr. M.C. Diffin)
- Subject: Re: Smallpox transmission, Syphilis Origin
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.121636.15739@crc.ac.uk>
- Sender: news@crc.ac.uk
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tin
- Organization: MRC Human Genome Resource Centre
- References: <1992Nov18.220449.1@cubldr.colorado.edu> <1992Nov19.162344.37887@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 12:16:36 GMT
- Lines: 21
-
- >>2. Has any consensus been reached about whether syphilis originated in
- >> the New World? Those same encyclopedias were noncommittal on this.
-
- ry>According to the history books that I read, syphilis was contracted
- ry>by Spanish conquistators while conquering the New World. The
- ry>Spanish conquistators brought smallpox to the natives of the New World.
- ry>Smallpox had a devastating effect on the natives.
-
- I don't think this is so, although I agree it was the accepted dogma for
- many years. The distribution of syphilis, bejel, yaws and pinta (all
- closely related) strongly points to an Afroasian origin. This theory is
- enforced by arhceological evidence - lesions found in human remains
- which predate Columbus's little jaunt. Thus the European pandemic may
- just have been manifestation of the organism migrating across Eurasia.
-
-
- --
- ___________________________________________________________________________
- Michael Diffin
- JANET: mdiffin@uk.ac.mrc-crc PHONE: +44 (0)345 333111 Pager No. 0406653
- INTERNET: mdiffin@mrc-crc.ac.uk, mcd12@phx.cam.ac.uk
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