Ancient Virus ‘Resurrected’ From 30,000-Year-Old Ice In Siberia
Yeah. I saw this movie. The scene in the lab where they all take turns looking through the microscope and getting giddy at the sight of a virus thought dead coming back to life after 30 thousand years of dormancy. Cut to the virus mutating and feeding on brain tissue and a lockdown and a city held captive as authorities mull an atomic strike. just kidding. Yeah. Just kidding. I used to joke that the dinosaurs all died off because one day one woke up and didn’t feel good. And he coughed on his neighbor who coughed on his……But you have to think….What else does the ice hold?
Gee. I sound like Art Bell.
In what seems like a plot straight out of a low-budget science-fiction film, scientists have revived a giant virus that was buried in Siberian ice for 30,000 years — and it is still infectious. Its targets, fortunately, are amoebae, but the researchers suggest that as Earth’s ice melts, this could trigger the return of other ancient viruses, with potential risks for human health.
The newly thawed virus is the biggest one ever found. At 1.5 micrometres long, it is comparable in size to a small bacterium. Evolutionary biologists Jean-Michel Claverie and Chantal Abergel, the husband-and-wife team at Aix-Marseille University in France who led the work, named it Pithovirus sibericum, inspired by the Greek word ‘pithos’ for the large container used by the ancient Greeks to store wine and food. “We’re French, so we had to put wine in the story,” says Claverie. The results are published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.