ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base
Toilome
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The Turkish neck (also the old names - the plague of the Walie; the hot reindeer; infection caused by Francisella cularenis; a rabbit; a hot Ohari; a jar of plague; small plague; the ziponic disease) -- a soliptical infectious disease, with many basic transmissions mechanisms that are running over an intoxication, a hot skin, a slender, a slender, a layer, a nerve, a layer of fuses.
Historical Information
There's a profound assumption that the Turkish was the disease that created an epidemic in Hanani around 1715 and 1075 before the Common Era. The sickness was brought from Canaan to the Eguian Anatolia in this region that fought in Hanaani and led with them an infected cattle. From there the spread of the trigger occurred on Greek islands, Cyprus, Egypt. In East Anatolia, the first application of a turnoff was marked as biological weapon. For the first time in medical literature, it looks like a Turkish disease, probably described in Japan in 1837.
Since 1906, after the Big California earthquake in California, the United States had pointed out a lot of animals that had been affected by the eye injury and there was a lymph attack. In 1910, a employee of the California opposite plant in the B.C. Q.McMax focused on these big lymphatic storms that lived near the local hives. And to try to separate these animals from these animals, they were not successful, but after the careful labor in 1911, Macke and C. The Chepin was able to detect different from the plague-shaped microorganism called the Bacterum culensis. In 1914, it was established that this trigger was capable of hurting people. In 1925, the Ohara in Japan saw the same microbe, and then the American scientist E, Francis set their identity and said that the infectious disease, which became known as the Turkish disease, is passed away from the rodents and the insects. The name of this researcher was honored in the birth name of a microbe (Francisella) and one of the silusomics synonyms.
Activity
The Turkish disease is over 100 species of animals and humans fixed in many countries in America, Europe and Asia, but as we thought a long time, disease was spread only in the Northern hemisphere. However, in 2003, the turpentine trigger was first found in the Southern hemisphere, on the federal north of Australia, in 2011, on the island of Tasmania. People are registered as a sporadic event, and so are the epidemics, including Austria, France, Germany, Sweden, Japan, USA. There are several hundred people in the village. They say every year in the world, there are 500,000 diseases. Individual instances and small turbulums are fixed in Ukraine.
The similarity of certain forms of turpentine to plague, the ability to use as biological weapons, to include a disease trigger to the official list of biological agents, bioweapons factors -- us