The investigators studied sheep bones and teeth excavated at Arkaim, a former site of the Sintashta-Petrovka culture, which was known for cattle, sheep, and horse husbandry on the Western Eurasian Steppe.
Until now, the genome of ancient Yersinia pestis bacteria, which can't spread via fleas as in bubonic plague, had been identified only in ancient Eurasian humans because of a lack of direct DNA evidence tying animals to human infections in prehistory.
Arkaim "offered us a great place to look for plague clues: they were early pastoralist societies without the kind of grain storage that would attract rats and their fleas and prior Sintashta individuals have been found with Y. pestis infections," coauthor Taylor Hermes, PhD, of the University of Arkansas and Max Planck Institute, said in an institute news release.
Many infectious diseases emerged during prehistory, coinciding with animal domestication, which presented opportunities for spillover into people, they added. For example, the domestication of sheep, goats, pigs, and cattle and their interface with people are thought to have driven the emergence of deadly human pathogens causing infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, salmonellosis, and measles.
Source : umn.edu