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detect antibodies against Marburg (in thirteen of the roughly six hundred fruit bats sampled) and fragments of Marburg RNA (in thirty-one of the bats), but they also did something more difficult and compelling. Antibodies and RNA fragments, though significant, were just the same sorts of secondary evidence that had provisionally linked the Ebola virus to bats. This team had gone a step farther: They’d found live virus.
Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic
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