The subtype that emerged back then, known as H1N1, made its way from humans to pigs, and it continued infecting pigs long after the human pandemic ended.
As pigs were shipped from country to country through international trade, the H1N1 subtype spread into new herds, mutating along the way.
In the 1990s, pigs from both Europe and North America were important to Mexico.
Each stock of animals carried its own version of H1N1.
And in Mexico, those two kinds of influenza mixed their genes through reassortment in pigs.