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Ancient DNA provides evidence of earliest known plague outbreak

Ancient DNA from cemeteries in south-eastern Siberia indicates the earliest known plague outbreak occurred around 5,500 years ago. The study suggests that hunter-gatherer communities were infected by handling or consuming raw marmots, which are a primary reservoir for the plague-causing bacterium Yersinia pestis. The disease spread rapidly between people, leading to high mortality rates, particularly among children. The findings explain the unusually high number of child burials found at the Ust-Ida cemetery.

Plague is commonly associated with rats, crowded medieval cities, and the epidemics that swept across Europe during and after the Middle Ages. But a new study published in Nature shows that the disease was already lethal 5,500 years ago, when it killed humans in small, mobile hunter-gatherer communities—long before the rise of agriculture and cities created the conditions usually associated with plague epidemics.

An international group of researchers analyzed ancient DNA from human remains found at four hunter-gatherer cemeteries in the Lake Baikal region of East Siberia. Using advanced DNA sequencing techniques, the researchers reconstructed ancient bacterial genomes preserved in teeth, revealing previously unknown early strains of plague.

"Whether the earliest forms of plague were mild or virulent has been a matter of debate, but our findings demonstrate that these ancient strains were already highly lethal," says senior author Eske Willerslev, professor at the University of Copenhagen and the University of Cambridge.

The study combines genetic, archaeological and radiocarbon evidence to reconstruct how the outbreaks unfolded within the prehistoric groups.

"Based on the plague DNA, the genetic relationships between the victims, the archaeological analysis and the radiocarbon dating, we've built a really clear, complete picture of what happened during these outbreaks," says lead author Ruairidh Macleod, who carried out the work while a Ph.D. student at the University of Cambridge—and is now a research fellow at the University of Oxford.

In total, DNA from Yersinia pestis—the bacterium that causes plague—was detected in 18 of 46 individuals, nearly 40%. This is higher than the detection rate reported from some medieval plague pits.

More lethal than previously thought

Previous studies showed that early strains of Yersinia pestis lacked some of the genetic traits that later enabled bubonic plague to spread efficiently via fleas and rodent hosts. This led many researchers to believe that the earliest forms of plague were unlikely to have caused major outbreaks.

However, the new study challenges that assumption.

The mortality profiles at the two largest cemeteries show an exceptionally high number of children and young teenagers among the dead—something that had puzzled archaeologists working on the graves for decades.

"The unusually high number of children and the short timespan was a real puzzle that we've been trying to solve since the 1990s. Finding out that plague was the cause is extraordinary, but it makes so much sense," says archaeologist Andrzej Weber of the University of Alberta, principal investigator of the Baikal Archaeology Project.

Radiocarbon dating showed that many of the burials occurred within a very short time span. In several cases, siblings or parents and children appear to have died and been buried together.

Did superantigen cause lethality?

The ancient plague strains also carried a unique superantigen —a toxin-producing genetic factor not seen in historic plague strains. Superantigens can trigger extreme immune responses and are associated with severe inflammatory complications, likely increasing the severity of infection.

"This finding changes our understanding of the earliest plague outbreaks: Even before the bacterium evolved efficient flea-borne transmission, these ancient strains appear to have carried a potent combination of virulence factors that could make infection highly lethal," says senior author Martin Sikora, associate professor at the University of Copenhagen.

Together, the findings suggest that the earliest known plague outbreaks may already have been as deadly as later historical forms of the disease, especially for children, even without flea-borne transmission.

The study also supports the idea that plague may have originated in Central or North-East Asia before later spreading across Eurasia through wild rodent reservoirs. Archaeological evidence suggests these hunter-gatherers interacted closely with marmots—large burrowing rodents that still carry plague today—and researchers believe the outbreaks may have spread directly from infected marmots into humans.

Publication details

Ruairidh Macloud, Lethal plague outbreaks in Lake Baikal hunter-gatherers 5,500 years ago, Nature (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10540-5 . www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10540-5

Journal information:

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Citation :

Ancient DNA uncovers deadly plague outbreak among Siberian hunter-gatherers 5,500 years ago (2026, June 17)

retrieved 17 June 2026

from https://phys.org/news/2026-06-ancient-dna-uncovers-deadly-plague.html

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The Guardian (World)IndependentCenter4 days ago
Ancient DNA provides evidence of earliest known plague outbreak

Ancient DNA from cemeteries in south-eastern Siberia indicates the earliest known plague outbreak occurred around 5,500 years ago. The study suggests that hunter-gatherer communities were infected by handling or consuming raw marmots, which are a primary reservoir for the plague-causing bacterium Yersinia pestis. The disease spread rapidly between people, leading to high mortality rates, particularly among children. The findings explain the unusually high number of child burials found at the Ust-Ida cemetery.

Bias read (Center): The article presents scientific findings based on ancient DNA research without taking a political stance. It focuses on historical health events and does not involve contemporary political issues, making it apolitical in nature.

Phys.orgIndependentCenter4 days ago
Ancient DNA uncovers deadly plague outbreak among Siberian hunter-gatherers 5,500 years ago

A study published in Nature reveals that a deadly form of plague existed 5,500 years ago among Siberian hunter-gatherer communities. Researchers analyzed ancient DNA from human remains in the Lake Baikal region, identifying early strains of the plague bacterium. The findings suggest these ancient strains were highly lethal, challenging previous assumptions that plague was primarily linked to later agricultural societies.

Bias read (Center): The article presents scientific findings without overt ideological framing. It focuses on historical and biological research, using neutral language and citing academic sources. There is no apparent bias toward any political stance or agenda.

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