If it did, then who is writing this answer, and who is reading it? While Bubonic Plague (the Black Death) did kill about 1/3 of the population of Europe, it did not kill every single person in the universe.
The plague began about 1340, and is believed to have originated near China. A horde of Mongols attacked a remote trading outpost of an Italian merchant, and the attackers had an outbreak of plague. This was transmitted to the traders, brought back to Italy, and spread through Europe. Sanitation was not good in that time period, and the plague was spread by fleas carried by rats. People did not understand contagious diseases, and had no antibiotic drugs to cure it.
It is unlikely that any single black hole will ever consume even a significant part of the matter of the universe. However, the Heat Death hypothesis does allow for a large portion of the matter in the universe eventually falling into multiple black holes, and for black holes merging to form more massive black holes, possibly massing many times the Galaxy's central black hole.
The first recorded case of the Black Death was in China in 1334, spreading along trade routes. It is not possible to identify a single person as the first to catch the disease due to its rapid spread and lack of detailed historical records.
a person is dead and black mold speads aroud the person
It had the same affects as any other person with the plague (Black Death).
Type your answer here... the person went black
because it is run by all vital signs not with a single one . we can handle if it is single
No, the Black Death is not made of cells. It is caused by a bacterium called Yersinia pestis, which is a type of microorganism. The disease is transmitted through the bites of infected fleas or through direct contact with infected animals or humans.
The Heat Death of the Universe was created in 2003.
His name is the Black Flash.
Many people died from the black death, so it probably wasn't anyone important, no offense.
The black death is a Bacteria type disease that is transmitted primarily by fleas biting an animal or person Easily cured today with antibiotics.
There were several different form of black death. The most notorious was bubonic plague. In this disease the body became black from bruising in the final stages.