Imagine this world. Many people live on this planet within a certain time. Imagine that about 4 billion people out of the estimated 7 billion people on the planet were suddenly eradicated due to diseases that struck the world. No, it is not a horror movie scene or conspiracy This horrible reality actually happened in the distant past. Of course, I am talking about black death in Europe. It is a serious epidemic also known as black death or "brome pest", which infects Europe and effectively wipes out 60% of the population in two years spread throughout Europe.
So, in general, humans are awful. Nature recognizes this clearly and occasionally tries to destroy us. Black death disease in the 14th century is a good example - 20 million people were wiped out in just a few decades. Well, as new research reveals, this plague can also have surprisingly good impact on the environment. The research team led by Harvard posted an article in GeoHealth magazine that it tracks regional and global lead contamination as revealed by a series of state-of-the-art eye scoring analyzes. In general, mining and smelting, as well as a series of related industrial processes, contain large quantities of lead in the environment, the atmosphere and the hydrosphere.
What are the short-term and long-term effects of black death in medieval society? Black death is one of the most deadly diseases in human history, and in Europe peaked from 1348 to 1350. As a result of this illness, half of Europe's population was eliminated, short-term and long-term effects had a major impact on the structure of medieval society. People known as black death or other plague began in Central Asia, the Central Asia region spread along the Silk Road and eventually spread to Europe.
The toxicity of the history of mankind has always changed. (Wark) In the second pandemic, the plague, probably known as black death, wiped out nearly one-third of the population of Europe Black death is a terrible tragedy. Many people died from the 14th century to the 17th century and brought many changes Glandular plague does not spread by itself alone: for example, natural disasters such as earthquakes and floods push the rats into evacuation centers in human settlements find. (Wark). Rats live in places where humans live, spread epidemics, human beings infect not only plague plague with plague but also insects and other rodents, it may also be a carrier of a deadliest plague (Nikiforuk 45) Humans carry the plague unconsciously from one village to another and kill each.