Dr Abe V Rotor
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Were lost cities like that of the Aztecs' in ancient Mexico the testimony of an epidemic caused by spontaneous generation of disease pathogens?
One of the great puzzles in biology is spontaneous generation. Where do all these living things come from? Here are some observations to ponder and research on.

2. Annual plants like saluyot(Corchorus olitorius), kamkamote (Ipomea sp.), spinach (Amaranthussopinosus), and gulasiman (Oleracea), spontaneously populate barren fields and gardens, growing wild and thick like jungle, until a brush fire razes them to the ground as the Southwest monsoon leaves.
3. Lately, five towns and cities in the country which include Metro Manila, were declared emergency areas as Dengue or hemorrhagic fever spread to epidemic proportions. The resurgence of Malaria is also quite alarming in other areas, such as in Palawan. What really triggers an epidemic. Can these and similar diseases spread without their vectors? If it is so, how could they spontaneously rise and infect people?
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Bubonic Plague vector, Oriental rat flea (Xenopsylla chopis)
It gives us a scenario of rats overrunning the city: rats in the homes, in schools, churches, on the streets, even in the most protected places like the residence of the mayor who promised him a handsome reward but denied after. I could only imagine the unbelievable rate of reproduction of the pest, although these were not rats but lemmings, which normally do not cause serious damage. Such incident linked to the Bubonic Plague or Black Death that killed one-third of human population in Europe in the Middle Ages, spawned beliefs that rats grow out of living and non-living things. Many of such stories survive to this day.
5. Mad cow disease started in Britain in the nineties. It found its way to many countries of Europe, then to Japan and the US. Short of invading the whole northern hemisphere, the disease associated with human JCD Syndrome disappeared as sudden as how it appeared, And yet in its country of origin, the prion, the causal material - a protein, resides in the victim and may take twenty years to reach the central nervous system.
If prion is a special protein why does it behave like a living thing?
7. But the belief of spontaneous generation caused worldwide panic when an estimated 100 million people succumbed to the Spanish Flu virus whic in 1918. Although the worse hit were the US and India, the toll was estimated to be one out of six people living on earth at that time. The most vulnerable victims were the strong and healthy. The virus triggers the immune system that turns itself against the patient, so that the more resistant a patient is the more he is prone to die of the disease. Which leads the medical world to wonder why the very young and old had better chance to survive. Then after two years the pandemic just fizzled out as if it were a passing wind. Hence by 1920 virtually all cases were closed. Today the virus is kept alive in controlled laboratory condition for study.
Theories arose, among them is that the virus rode of a passing meteorite before reaching the earth. Or was it a prototype that mutated with indigenous strains?