?!?!WHAT?!?!
A parasitic egg 
was discovered by archeologists in Northern Syria, near the pelvis of a 
child’s skeleton. They say the skeleton dates back to when the ancient 
societies started growing crops using irrigation systems. Farming with 
irrigation means farmers spent most of their time on the farms, wading 
in warm water. These are ideal conditions for these parasites to get 
into the human body. They may also have triggered outbreaks of 
schistosomiasis, a water-borne flatworm disease.
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A Near Eastern Archeology professor at University of Chicago, Gil Stein in an email said that,  “the
 invention of irrigation was a major technological breakthrough (but) it
 had unintended consequences. A more reliable food supply came at the 
cost of more disease.”
As people wade through the warm fresh 
water, the flatworm parasite enters their skin: snails carry the worms 
and they easily burrow into a human’s skin. When they grow into adult 
form, the worms live in the kidneys, bladder, intestines and any other 
place in the body for many years. Symptoms caused by these parasites 
include rashes, fever, vomiting, abdominal pain, and leg paralysis. The 
disease can, however, be treated easily today using drugs that kill the 
worms.
Evidence of 
barley and wheat farming was found in the town where the skeletons were 
found, according to Stein. Irrigation of these crops could have spurred 
other diseases like malaria, due to the pools of stagnant water that are
 good mosquito breeding grounds. 
Another study author, Piers 
Mitchell, said that the global transmission of these flatworm parasites 
could have been inadvertently launched by ancient farming societies. 
These worms now cause sicknesses to many people every year. In 
developing countries, modern methods of farming are still helping spread
 diseases. “In many parts of Africa, someone clever decides to put in
 a dam or an artificial water source and then 10 years later, everyone’s
 getting schistosomiasis,” she said.
This research is available in the journal of Lancet Infectious Diseases online. 
Other experts 
agree that irrigation could have been what helped spread the parasitic 
diseases from the beginning, in ancient times. Quentin Bickle, was one 
of them. He is a parasite expert at the London School of Hygiene and 
Tropical Medicine. "Egypt along the Nile was a hotspot for 
generations because people were crammed into the flood plain and there 
were probably a lot of people who had low-level (flatworm) infections 
for their entire lives. People would have known there was something 
weird going on but they wouldn't have known what to do”
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
But, how is this possible??
ReplyDelete...any explanations?!?!