The Bubonic Plague spread to both Europe and Asia during the 14th century pandemic known as the Black Death. It originated in Asia and was later introduced to Europe by traders and travelers, resulting in widespread devastation across both continents.
Europe, Antarctica and Africa: both Western and Eastern. South America, Asia and Africa: both Southern and Northern. Only includes contrasting hemispheres.
The contry that has two continents is Russia. The two continents in Russia are Europe and Asia. By the way you could have googled "The seven continents of the world" in images it would have been much quicker.
A land area that contains two continents is called an isthmus. It serves as a narrow strip of land connecting two larger landmasses, separating two bodies of water. Examples include the Isthmus of Panama connecting North and South America, and the Isthmus of Suez connecting Africa and Asia.
The two smallest continents are Europe and Australia. Europe is just a bit bigger then Australia.
The contry that has two continents is Russia. The two continents in Russia are Europe and Asia. By the way you could have googled "The seven continents of the world" in images it would have been much quicker.
Bubonic and septicemic plague are two of the three types of plague. The main difference between the two is that the bubonic plague cause extreme infection and swelling of the lymph nodes while the septicemic plague cause the body's clotting mechanism to stop.
In addition to the bubonic plague, there are two other different diseases caused by the same organism, called the septicemic plague and the pneumonic plague. The bubonic plague is spread by rats and fleas; a person gets it by being bitten by an infected flea. The septicemic form is the same disease, except that it has spread into a person's blood stream, where it progresses more rapidly and is more likely to be lethal. If the plague gets into a person's lungs, then the form is the pneumonic plague, and it can be spread in the droplets in the air when that person coughs; another person can catch the pneumonic plague by breathing the air.
There were two forms of plague, one Bubonic and the other Pneumonic. Pneumonic was not currable.
Today, when people say the plague as in a disease, they generally mean the bubonic plague. However, there are three types of plague: - bubonic - the kind with the swollen lymph nodes called buboes, that's where the name comes from - pneumonic - this is transmitted by coughing and people usually die within 2 days of showing symptoms - septicemic, which is in your blood and causes tissue to die. Pneumonic is far more contageous and kills quicker than the other two, so that's arguably the worst. If you mean the Plague as in the big pandemic that wiped out 1/3 of Europe in the 1350s, it was a mixture of bubonic and pneumonic.
The two theories are: Tiny fleas would bite the rats that infested the streets. They would then carry bacteria from the rat to humans, because they would bite humans, spreading the bacteria. Humans would then spread the disease by touching and being near other people. The other theory is that God was punishing all humans for their sins by sending the Bubonic Plague (Black Death)
Answer:Technically, no, but they both happened at the same time The Black Death had two plagues during it, the Pneumonic and the BUBONIC so I can see where your coming fromMore:Bubonic plague is one of three possible manifestations of a disease, and the Black Death was one specific epidemic of the same disease, in which all manifestations appeared. (In addition to the bubonic and pneumonic forms of the plague, there is a form called septicemic).Please use the link below for more information.
Lets just look at the plague bacillus as most microbes spread in different ways.Signs and symptoms of the plague: elevated fever, flulike symptoms at first, buboes, which were orange sized, septic shock, cardiovascular collapse.There are two forms of bubonic plague: the bubonic form (cardiovascular) and the pneumonic form (lungs and respiratory tract). The pneumonic was nearly 100% fatal and passed like a cold is. The bubonic form entered the blood and travel into the lymph system. The nodes tried to produce many white cells to fight it off and many times won.
That was a plague epidemic, which has two main forms: bubonic plague (you get a srt of boils filled with a cangrenous liquid which is black, hence the name) and a pneumonic form (which involves the respiratory tract). The Black Death was of course a bubonic plague epidemic.
There were two types of the plague the bubonic plague and the pneumonic. The signs of having the bubonic plague were swellings in your armpits and groin. The signs of having the pneumonic plague were having breathing problems, you coughed up blood and you died more rapidly.
The Bubonic Plague was the biggest. Charlemagne's reign also had an effect.
The black death and the bubonic plague. (Same thing).
It was the terrible disease called bubonic plague. It was present in two forms: 1. Infection of the bloodstream, causing the buboes and internal bleeding. It was spread by contact. 2. Virulent pneumonic type that infected the lungs. It was spread by respiratory infection.