yofomojojo
yofomojojo t1_jdk0chr wrote
Reply to comment by im_thatoneguy in What happened to the old COVID variants, like Delta? Could they come back? by number1dork
Re: your edit - I'm open to being rebutted here but, I think that clip might be a bit outdated. H1N1 is Swine Flu and Spanish Flu. If we're doing podcast links, RadioLab covered this topic again during early Covid. Current scientific papers and articles on the topic all seem to understand and accept that H1N1 is the virus in question in both cases.
yofomojojo t1_jdjj3fe wrote
Reply to comment by PHealthy in What happened to the old COVID variants, like Delta? Could they come back? by number1dork
Just to follow up on the re-emergence question. Here's a fun fact about the original Influenza epidemic we call the Spanish Flu; H1N1: It actually died out, once.
Partially from its own mortality rate, partially from built up immunities over time and evolving variants, but by the time we understood what viruses really were and how to approach them, there was no known surviving sample of it.
Before it died out, though, it passed on, first into the birds as H1N2, swapping out one bit for another, and again into pigs as H3N1, which themselves eventually crossed and produced H3N2, but enough mutations and variations kept the base nodes on infrequent rotation over the years. And eventually they met and hot swapped again, giving us the "Novel" influenza virus we called Swine Flu, H1N1.
And at some point, someone found an inexplicably well preserved vial of blood containing the Spanish Flu from back in the early 1900s, and tested it, confirming suspicions that yes indeed, through a series of exchanged hands, swine flu was a perfect re-assembly of the original Spanish Flu strain of influenza.
Tl;Dr - re-emergence is entirely possible even when the given strain has already gone extinct. Blind mutation and hot swapped component parts can always put Humpty Dumpty back together again.
yofomojojo t1_j29liw4 wrote
Reply to comment by bambrini16 in Ever wonder if anyone else on the globe was ever watching the same exact show at the same timestamp by Double-Working1990
They were referring to the current cord-cutting generation, I assume. Analogue broadcast TV went offline in America years ago so you'd only get TV if you paid for cable or some equivalent service. Plenty of people opted to just stick to streaming services and "cut the cord".
yofomojojo t1_ispbrvw wrote
Reply to comment by svladcjelli42 in TIL eels swim from a lake in Australia through stormwater drains and across the ocean to lay eggs in New Caledonia where they die. Their eggs hatch and make the return journey back to the lake they came from. by Aussiewhiskeydiver
"Hey hun, had to go out and die real quick, feel free to eat our leftovers for dinner. We left directions somewhere in the Sargasso Sea. Take care, Mommy and Daddy <3"
yofomojojo OP t1_je89pto wrote
Reply to comment by jon_hendry in I remember hearing during the hype leading up to the JWST launch that it would take roughly six months to a year to complete the first pass of an updated CMB map. How are we doing on that? by yofomojojo
Yeah, I'm realizing I have two contradicting notions in my head about that now. Is there still some sort of mapping being done, by any other name than CMB though? That thing we were all excited for a peak of about how the universe X billion years ago was shaped?