It doesn't seem too implausible that even a lab-created pathogen could mutate once in the wild. That said, the study in the linked article makes a strong argument that at least some variants also came from a lab... most likely it's a mixture of both.
It doesn't seem too implausible that even a lab-created pathogen could mutate once in the wild. That said, the study in the linked article makes a strong argument that at least some variants also came from a lab... most likely it's a mixture of both.
It doesn't seem too implausible that even a lab-created pathogen could mutate once in the wild. That said, the study in the linked article makes a strong argument that at least some variants also came from a lab... most likely it's a mixture of both.
Dr. David Martin documented from their own patents that the lab created thing is "replication defective."