Tuesday, 6 June 2017

Biggest Mysteries of London

The city of London has been shrouded in mystery for centuries. From serial killers to mysterious disappearances to ghost sightings, some of London’s most famous enigmas are still talked about today. However, recent developments in science and technology have shed new light on the many unsolved crimes and riddles that have left experts stumped for decades—and sometimes even centuries. Still, as more details are uncovered, even more questions follow.
What Really Caused The Great Plague?

During the 1660s, the Great Plague of London killed more than a quarter of the city’s population in just 18 months. For centuries, experts believed that rats were responsible for the disease spreading so quickly, but recent DNA findings have shown that this isn’t the case at all.
In 2016, scientists from the Museum of London Archaeology and the Max Planck Institute in Germany examined 3,300 skeletons that were discovered in a burial ground near Liverpool Street. During their studies, they found that DNA from the Yersinia pestis bacterium was present in 42 of the skeletons, and further analyses will reveal more about why it spread the way it did.
Researchers had already learned enough to refute the idea that the Great Fire of London was responsible for stopping the spread of the plague, as it was previously believed. Because the majority of the people dying from the plague were living in London’s suburbs around the time of the Great Fire in 1666, it could not have been a major cause of the disease being wiped out.

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