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Is the zombie virus more dangerous than the corona to devour the human race? It is expected to be there next year

The predictions of the Brazilian astrologer Athos Salomi are not so good this time. People are treating Athos’ predictions for 2023 with some trepidation. Salome says the things men fear will happen next year. Salome says the coming year will bring hope, tragedy and things beyond human imagination. Salome says that a new pandemic like Corona will happen in 2023.

A terrible virus awaits man. It will destroy the world. Athos Salomi says the virus is currently under the freezing ice of Antarctica. It is prophesied that it will become a pandemic that will shake all of humanity. Meanwhile, a new study by Russian researchers confirms this. Today, the scientific world receives woolly mammoth fossils from the Siberian permafrost in Russia and elsewhere. Now the scientific world is trying to wake up the ancient viruses that sleep underground with woolly mammoths. Northeastern Siberia is the focus of research. In addition to woolly mammoths, fossils of many burrowing creatures are found here.

These fossils also contain many inactivated viruses. The scientific world is watching them now. The research is led by the most famous Vector Institute in Russia. Vector researchers aim to extract cellular material from fossils containing ancient viruses that killed woolly mammoths and study them in the laboratory. But today’s human body is not familiar with these ancient viruses. So it is not known how they react to humans.

Some even fear that perhaps, if these sleeping terrorists wake up, another pandemic worse than Covid will arise again. Certainly such viruses are cause for concern if they are capable of killing woolly mammoths, which are vastly superior in strength and size to humans. Concerns have been expressed in this regard by the scientific world. Shawn-Michael Claverie, a professor of microbiology at Aix-Marseille University in France, says the research is alarming and he’s against it. He says these viruses may be 200,000 to 400,000 years old and some of them may still be able to infect humans or animals. He reminded that this search is fraught with great dangers.

But whether or not vector researchers study these viruses, scientists warn that melting Arctic ice and permafrost due to global warming could lead to the release of such viruses. While such viruses have not yet posed a significant threat, the possibility of such viruses in the future cannot be ruled out. Therefore, the researchers emphasize that these viruses need to be studied. Permafrost, which has been frozen for hundreds of years in northern Russian Siberia at temperatures below zero degrees Celsius, has trapped the remains of many creatures, including Paleolithic mammoths.

Last month the scientific world announced that 13 viruses belonging to five different groups had been identified and reanimated from the snow of the permafrost. The researchers also reanimated a 48,500-year-old virus. It is believed to be the oldest virus so far brought back to the scientific world. The Vector Institute State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology is located in Koltsovo, Novosibirsk, near Siberia. Operating under conditions of maximum security, Vector was part of the Soviet Union’s biological weapons program.

Deadly viruses such as smallpox and Marburg were developed here. The viruses responsible for many deadly diseases are believed to be stored at the Vector Institute. This laboratory, which began operation in 1974, is generally said to have been built by the Soviet Union to develop biological weapons. The Vector Institute is currently developing vaccines for various diseases. Russian Epivac Corona has developed a covid vaccine vector. Vector is one of only two laboratories in the world that host smallpox viruses. Another is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, USA.

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