The researchers suggested that given the diversity of factors like climate and population density in different corners of the empire, the plague couldn’t have affected all areas of the Mediterranean in the same way.
While medical researchers and doctors continue their battle against the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, a group of scientists have turned their attention towards a certain infamous plague epidemic that ravaged the Mediterranean during the 6th century – the Plague of Justinian.
According to phys.org, researchers Lauren White and Lee Mordechai of the University of Maryland’s National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) have challenged the assumption that the plague in question wiped out nearly half of the population of the Eastern Roman Empire, using the “novel mathematical models” they’ve developed to re-examine the sources from that time.
The researchers also question the existing assumption that the plague affected all areas of the Mediterranean in the same way, with White and Mordechai arguing that the diversity of factors like climate and population density in different corners of the empire would’ve made such scenario rather unlikely.
The study, titled “Modeling the Justinianic Plague: Comparing hypothesized transmission routes”, was published in PLOS One scientific journal.
Sourse: sputniknews.com
0.00 (0%) 0 votes
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The Coalition for the Restoration of Democracy (CORED), which unites 18 opposition parties in Guinea, said on…
The news of an interplanetary scale comes after NASA believed it had captured its first sample with Perseverance last month,…
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The last pipe of the second string of Nord Stream 2 has been welded, and after a…
LONDON (Sputnik) – The UK government on Monday condemned the military coup against the president of Guinea, Alpha Conde, and…