"This week's anthrax
outbreak signals that global warming is transforming Siberia's lonely
wilderness into a feverish nightmarescape"
A Russian heatwave has
activated long-dormant anthrax bacteria in Siberia, sickening at least 13
people and killing one boy and more than 2,300 reindeer.
According
to the Siberian Times on Monday:
A total of 72 people are now
in hospital, a rise of 32 since Friday, under close observation amid fears of a
major outbreak. 41 of those hospitalized are children as Russia copes with a
full scale health emergency above the polar circle which has also killed
thousands of reindeer.
A state of emergency has been
imposed throughout the region in western Siberia, and reindeer herding
communities have been quarantined.
While NBC News last week pinned
the blame for the outbreak on "[t]he carcass of a reindeer thought to
have died from anthrax decades ago," new reports suggest an old burial
ground could be the source.
Nadezhda Noskova, press
secretary of the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Region government, told the Siberian
Times:
We are working out all the
versions of what has happened. The first version is that due to the very hot weather
permafrost thawed and bared the carcass of an animal which died from anthrax
long ago.
The other version is that it
could have been a human body. The point is that Nenets and Khanty peoples do
not bury their dead in the ground.
They put them into the wooden
coffins—they resemble boxes—and place them on a stand or hillock.
The old cemetery could be also
the source of the disease.
But regardless of the precise
culprit, there's little doubt that climate change is exacerbating the health
crisis.
The Washington Post noted
last week, "Temperatures have soared in western Russia's Yamal
tundra this summer," with several regions seeing
record heat. Indeed, temperatures in the Yamal tundra above the Arctic Circle have
hit highs of 95°F this summer, compared to an average of 77°F.
The Post quoted two Russian
researchers, who warned in 2011: "As a consequence of permafrost melting,
the vectors of deadly infections of the 18th and 19th centuries may come
back...especially near the cemeteries where the victims of these infections
were buried."
"The extreme heat has
triggered a seemingly endless rash of freak weather, natural disasters, and
signs of ecological malaise, including enormous
wildfires, record flooding, and natural
moon bounces [methane bubbles] that might be explosive," staff writer
Maddie Stone reported at Gizmodo. "But above all else, this week's
anthrax outbreak—the first to hit the region since 1941—signals that global
warming is transforming Siberia's lonely wilderness into a feverish
nightmarescape."
Or, as Charles Pierce wrote
at Esquire on Monday, "an anthrax strain that has spent 75 years resting,
sleeping a lot, going a few times a week to the Bacteria Gym, and generally
muscling up, gets another chance at sickening reindeer and people because the
Great Climate Change Hoax has thawed the permafrost, so it gets its shot at the
reindeer and people that didn't die in the record wildfires. I would point out
that one of our two major political parties doesn't believe that any of this is
happening, and that the party's candidate for president thinks it all might be
a hoax thought up by the Chinese."
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