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1977 Influenza Pandemic Sequence Shows Signs of Laboratory Creation: Journal ‘Cell’

NIH/NIAID-funded, peer-reviewed analysis finds defining sequence carries patterns consistent with controlled handling—meaning it looks man-made.

By Jon Fleetwood | April 19, 2026

A newly published study in Cell reports that the genetic sequence associated with the 1977 influenza pandemic carries clear, measurable patterns consistent with laboratory handling.

Meaning it appears man-made.

The analysis was led by scientists at UC San Diego, UCLA, Temple University, Cornell University, the University of Arizona, and The Scripps Research Institute.

It was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

Sequence Matches Known Laboratory Signatures

The researchers identified a specific pattern embedded in the sequence.

One that aligns with laboratory conditions rather than uncontrolled external processes.

They state:

“the reemergence of H1N1 influenza A virus in 1977 was preceded by a shift in selection intensity, consistent with the hypothesis of passage in a laboratory setting.”

The study makes clear that these types of patterns are not random.

They are:

“distinct evolutionary signatures” produced through laboratory passage.

The 1977 sequence carries that signature.

That means the sequence behaves like something that has been handled, worked on, or preserved in a lab.

Not something that developed continuously on its own.

Sequence Does Not Follow a Natural Timeline

The study also identifies a major break in the expected timeline of the sequence.

Researchers found:

  • only 48 substitutions over roughly 27 years,
  • and strong similarity to strains from the 1950s.

Under normal conditions, far more change would be expected.

Instead, the sequence appears to have been:

  • held in a stable, nearly unchanged state, then
  • reintroduced with minimal differences.

Meaning the sequence does not reflect a continuous passage through time.

It looks paused, preserved, and then brought back.

That pattern is consistent with storage or maintenance under controlled conditions.

Statistical Patterns Align With Controlled Environments

Beyond the timeline anomaly, the sequence shows a distinct pattern in how changes occur.

The study detected:

  • a shift in selection pressure,
  • and a pattern associated with reduced constraints compared to typical conditions.

The authors note:

“we consistently found evidence for a change in the selection regime of passaged viruses”

These same patterns are observed in:

  • laboratory-passaged material,
  • attenuated vaccine development,
  • and controlled experimental systems.

In plain terms: the way this sequence changes matches laboratory conditions.

Not uncontrolled external conditions.

Direct Link to Laboratory Activity

The study connects these findings to known laboratory practices, stating:

“consistent with the reemergence of H1N1 in 1977 being due to an escape during an influenza vaccine trial.”

Researchers also identify temperature sensitivity, a known outcome of laboratory-based attenuation techniques.

All of this points to:

  • controlled handling or passaging,
  • storage under laboratory conditions,
  • and release following that handling.

The sequence aligns with known lab processes.

What the Study Is Actually Showing

The analysis is entirely sequence-based.

It does not rely on observing a pathogen directly.

Instead, it examines:

  • mutation patterns,
  • statistical signals,
  • and structural characteristics of the sequence.

And those characteristics, according to the study, align with laboratory-associated handling.

That means the conclusion comes from what the sequence objectively looks like and what those patterns indicate.

Bottom Line

The Cell study identifies multiple independent indicators that the genetic sequence associated with the 1977 influenza pandemic does not follow a continuous, uncontrolled pattern.

Instead, it shows:

  • a break in expected timeline,
  • minimal change over decades,
  • and a statistical signature matching laboratory conditions.

This means the defining sequence tied to the 1977 influenza pandemic carries the same detectable signature seen when something has been handled in a laboratory.

The 1977 influenza pandemic sequence does not look naturally derived.

It looks man-made.

That raises a direct question: if the sequence at the center of a pandemic appears man-made, what role did laboratory systems play in the event itself?

May 4, 2026 Posted by | Deception, Timeless or most popular, War Crimes | , | Comments Off on 1977 Influenza Pandemic Sequence Shows Signs of Laboratory Creation: Journal ‘Cell’