SCI Welp, Scientists Found 28 New Virus Groups in a Melting Glacier

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I didn't want to loose this in the Wuhan thread, nor introduce any drift....HC

Posted for fair use.....

Welp, Scientists Found 28 New Virus Groups in a Melting Glacier
This is how the world ends.

By Jennifer Leman

Jan 23, 2020
  • Scientists have unearthed 28 previously undiscovered viruses, which were trapped in glacial ice from 15,000 years ago.
  • The team collected the samples from the Guliya ice cap in Tibet, and published their work to the pre-print website, BioRxiv.
  • As glacial ice and permafrost around the world continues to thaw, scientists are concerned that ancient pathogens and toxic chemicals may be released into the environment.
It's the stuff of a Stephen King novel.

Researchers from China and the U.S. embarked on a field trip to Tibet in 2015, and discovered 28 previously undiscovered virus groups—in a melting glacier. They recently detailed their findings in a paper posted to the non-peer reviewed pre-print website bioRxiv.

The researchers drilled a 164-foot hole into the glacier, gathered two ice core samples from the 15,000-year-old glacier, and then later identified them in a lab. In total, they identified 33 virus groups—28 of which were completely new to science.





From Tibet to the Arctic to Antarctica, glaciers and ice caps around the world are melting at alarming rates. Scientists are racing the clock and climate change to collect, identify, and catalogue the microbes found in ancient ice. Having a record of these bacteria, viruses, and fungi paints a sharper picture of our prehistoric past and could be valuable for use in studying future pathogens.

Meltwater from glaciers and ice caps could ferry harmful pathogens along streams, rivers, and other important waterways, potentially exposing humans to new microbes, the researchers report. But ice isn't the only thing that's melting. Thawing permafrost, a frozen layer of earth found in high latitudes and at elevation, creates its own unique set of challenges.

Gases like methane and carbon dioxide, which have been trapped in the long-frozen earth, are being released into the atmosphere at alarming rates. Permafrost houses twice as much carbon than what's currently found in the atmosphere, climate change scientist Sue Natali of the Woods Hole Research Center told the BBC.

In recent years, researchers have pulled samples of smallpox, Spanish flu, bubonic plague, and even anthrax from thawing permafrost. Scientists have also found harmful pollutants, such as mercury, trapped in the reservoirs beneath Alaskan permafrost.



Entrance to Global Seed Vault, Svalbard, Norway



In 2017, the Global Seed Vault, which houses the world’s largest supply of plant seeds, flooded due to slumping permafrost.
Cultura RM Exclusive/Tim E WhiteGetty Images


And then there's the structural damages associated with the thawing permafrost. Swedish Nuclear Waste Management, a company that stores Sweden, Finland, and Canada's spent nuclear fuel atop permafrost, has joined other norther facilities to address future thawing. Any slumping or sagging could potentially jeopardize the structural integrity of the agency's nuclear waste containment system.

Countless other buildings and even Alaskan cemeteries (!) are in jeopardy of structural damage wrought by destabilized permafrost. In 2017, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, a massive plant seed repository on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, flooded after the permafrost on which it was built began to sag.




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While scientists have discovered a seemingly endless series of terrifying plagues, diseases, and chemicals in thawing permafrost and melting ice, there's a very, very thin silver lining. The great thaw has also revealed long-lost treasures from an earlier time.

In 2018, scientists discovered an ancient 18,000-year-old doggo (okay, it's probably a wolf) trapped in permafrost just outside of the Siberian capital, Yakutsk. It still had a lush, velvety coat. Researchers have also unearthed mammoths, more wolves, and arctic mummies.

Correction: We've updated the article to clarify that Tibet is not in the Arctic. We apologize for the confusion.
 

niceguy

Veteran Member
From April 2002:

Fascinating stuff. Also very cool that Dennis brought that much site history to the new DB.
 

Snyper

Veteran Member
Meltwater from glaciers and ice caps could ferry harmful pathogens along streams, rivers, and other important waterways, potentially exposing humans to new microbes, the researchers report.
So, hasn't that already been happening since the last Ice Age ended anyway?
 

BadMedicine

Would *I* Lie???
Read Guns, Germs and Steel, history is full of undocumented germs, and diseases.
That is a GREAT book, for understanding why some cultures/people excelled over others so rapidly, and why civilization/industry/ bureaucracy was widely a thing of Eurasia...

Plagues and Peoples is a MUST READ for how DISEASE, going back thousands of years has changed the course of nations, peoples, wars, agricultures, basically everything. A typical page of the part about china says, translated from THOUSANDS of years ol monastery manuscripts reads like this (and this is just from memory, made up dates and names, numbers real)
plague in wuhan 1500bc: 160,000 dead
fever outbreak in schezuan 400BC 55,000 dead.
pox outbreak in jenjen: 230,000 dead

it goes on for pages with hundreds of thousands dead in plagues and pestilence.. well recorded... it just boggles the mind there were that many people to kill then! But compact populations with no knowledge of micro-biology and disease can turn bad fast with ONE introduction of a new disease..
 
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