WEBVTT 00:00:06.580 --> 00:00:10.082 Imagine if half the people in your neighborhood, your city, 00:00:10.082 --> 00:00:12.995 or even your whole country were wiped out. 00:00:12.995 --> 00:00:16.336 It might sound like something out of an apocalyptic horror film, 00:00:16.336 --> 00:00:19.049 but it actually happened in the 14th century 00:00:19.049 --> 00:00:22.898 during a disease outbreak known as the Black Death. 00:00:22.898 --> 00:00:26.869 Spreading from China through Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Europe, 00:00:26.869 --> 00:00:31.743 the devastating epidemic destroyed as much as 1/5 of the world's population, 00:00:31.743 --> 00:00:36.469 killing nearly 50% of Europeans in just four years. 00:00:36.469 --> 00:00:39.585 One of the most fascinating and puzzling things abut the Black Death 00:00:39.585 --> 00:00:42.478 is that the illness itself was not a new phenomenon 00:00:42.478 --> 00:00:45.654 but one that has affected humans for centuries. 00:00:45.654 --> 00:00:48.921 DNA analysis of bone and tooth samples from this period, 00:00:48.921 --> 00:00:54.091 as well as an earlier epidemic known as the Plague of Justinian in 541 CE, 00:00:54.091 --> 00:00:57.471 has revealed that both were caused by Yersinia pestis, 00:00:57.471 --> 00:01:02.077 the same bacterium that causes bubonic plague today. 00:01:02.077 --> 00:01:06.100 What this means is that the same disease caused by the same pathogen 00:01:06.100 --> 00:01:10.244 can behave and spread very differently throughout history. 00:01:10.244 --> 00:01:14.377 Even before the use of antibiotics, the deadliest oubreaks in modern times, 00:01:14.377 --> 00:01:17.804 such as the ones that occurred in early 20th century India, 00:01:17.804 --> 00:01:21.277 killed no more than 3% of the population. 00:01:21.277 --> 00:01:24.509 Modern instances of plague also tend to remain localized, 00:01:24.509 --> 00:01:28.058 or travel slowly, as they are spread by rodent fleas. 00:01:28.058 --> 00:01:31.091 But the medieval Black Death, which spread like wildfire, 00:01:31.091 --> 00:01:35.002 was most likely communicated directly from one person to another. 00:01:35.002 --> 00:01:39.713 And because genetic comparisons of ancient to modern strains of Yersinia pestis 00:01:39.713 --> 00:01:43.247 have not revealed any significantly functional genetic differences, 00:01:43.247 --> 00:01:46.292 the key to why the earlier outbreak was so much deadlier 00:01:46.292 --> 00:01:49.599 must lie not in the parasite but the host. 00:01:49.599 --> 00:01:52.397 For about 300 years during the High Middle Ages, 00:01:52.397 --> 00:01:54.839 a warmer climate and agricultural improvements 00:01:54.839 --> 00:01:58.777 had led to explosive population growth throughout Europe. 00:01:58.777 --> 00:02:00.634 But with so many new mouths to feed, 00:02:00.634 --> 00:02:03.687 the end of this warm period spelled disaster. 00:02:03.687 --> 00:02:06.600 High fertility rates combined with reduced harvest, 00:02:06.600 --> 00:02:09.899 meant the land could no longer support its population, 00:02:09.899 --> 00:02:13.048 while the abundant supply of labor kept wages low. 00:02:13.048 --> 00:02:16.402 As a result, most Europeans in the early 14th century 00:02:16.402 --> 00:02:19.489 experienced a steady decline in living standards, 00:02:19.489 --> 00:02:24.681 marked by famine, poverty and poor health, leaving them vulnerable to infection. 00:02:24.681 --> 00:02:28.216 And indeed, the skeletal remains of Black Death victims found in London 00:02:28.216 --> 00:02:32.626 show telltale signs of malnutrition and prior illness. 00:02:32.626 --> 00:02:37.271 The destruction caused by the Black Death changed humanity in two important ways. 00:02:37.271 --> 00:02:40.362 On a societal level, the rapid loss of population 00:02:40.362 --> 00:02:43.717 led to important changes in Europe's economic conditions. 00:02:43.717 --> 00:02:45.535 With more food to go around, 00:02:45.535 --> 00:02:49.836 as well as more land and better pay for the surviving farmers and workers, 00:02:49.836 --> 00:02:55.221 people began to eat better and live longer as studies of London cemeteries have shown. 00:02:55.221 --> 00:02:58.955 Higher living standards also brought an increase in social mobility, 00:02:58.955 --> 00:03:03.244 weakening feudalism, and eventually leading to political reforms. 00:03:03.244 --> 00:03:06.786 But the plague also had an important biological impact. 00:03:06.786 --> 00:03:10.357 The sudden death of so many of the most frail and vulnerable people 00:03:10.357 --> 00:03:14.042 left behind a population with a significantly different gene pool, 00:03:14.042 --> 00:03:17.299 including genes that may have helped survivors resist the disease. 00:03:17.299 --> 00:03:20.357 And because such mutations often confer immunities 00:03:20.357 --> 00:03:23.269 to multiple pathogens that work in similar ways, 00:03:23.269 --> 00:03:26.638 research to discover the genetic consequences of the Black Death 00:03:26.638 --> 00:03:29.287 has the potential to be hugely beneficial. 00:03:29.287 --> 00:03:32.328 Today, the threat of an epidemic on the scale of the Black Death 00:03:32.328 --> 00:03:35.528 has been largely eliminated thanks to antibiotics. 00:03:35.528 --> 00:03:40.596 But the bubonic plague continues to kill a few thousand people worldwide every year, 00:03:40.596 --> 00:03:43.103 and the recent emergence of a drug-resistant strain 00:03:43.103 --> 00:03:45.983 threatens the return of darker times. 00:03:45.983 --> 00:03:49.278 Learning more about the causes and effects of the Black Death is important, 00:03:49.278 --> 00:03:53.212 not just for understanding how our world has been shaped by the past. 00:03:53.212 --> 00:03:56.686 It may also help save us from a similar nightmare in the future.