Anthropology
Related: About this forumHuman Genome Recovered From 5,700-Year-Old Chewing Gum
Modern chewing gums, which often contain polyethylene plastic, could stick around for tens or even hundreds of years, and perhaps much longer in the right conditions. Some of the first chewing gums, made of birch tar and other natural substances, have been preserved for thousands of years, including a 5,700-year-old piece of Stone Age gum unearthed in Denmark.
For archaeologists, the sticky stuffs longevity can help piece together the lives of ancient peoples who masticated on the chewy tar. The ancient birch gum in Scandinavia preserved enough DNA to reconstruct the full human genome of its ancient chewer, identify the microbes that lived in her mouth, and even reveal the menu of a prehistoric meal.
These birch pitch chewing gums are kind of special in terms of how well the DNA is preserved. It surprised us, says co-author Hannes Schroeder, a molecular anthropologist at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Its as well-preserved as some of the best petrous [skull] bones that weve analyzed, and they are kind of the holy grail when it comes to ancient DNA preservation.
Birch pitch, made by heating the trees bark, was commonly used across Scandinavia as a prehistoric glue for attaching stone tools to handles. When found, it commonly contains toothmarks. Scientists suspect several reasons why people would have chewed it: to make it malleable once again after it cooled, to ease toothaches because its mildly antiseptic, to clean teeth, to ease hunger pains, or simply because they enjoyed it.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/human-genome-recovered-5700-year-old-chewing-gum-180973801/
LastDemocratInSC
(3,829 posts)Wicked Blue
(6,650 posts)Warpy
(113,130 posts)We used to chew it as kids because our parents wouldn't buy us gum and we were hungry. It wasn't bad. It was abundant enough that we never parked it anywhere, just went patooie before we came in for supper.
There was also black chewing gum that likely favored the tar stuff, Beeman's was the brand I remember. I didn't like it much, the tree sap was better.
FirstLight
(14,087 posts)the amount of information they can extract, even the bacteria living in the mouth! wow.
Science is so freakin cool. I used to wanna be an archaeologist when I was a kid.
Judi Lynn
(162,379 posts)Wicked Blue
(6,650 posts)and now they sell it commercially.
https://estonianworld.com/business/global-estonian-family-markets-birch-water-world/
wnylib
(24,389 posts)chewed the sap of trees called chicle. In Spanish, the word for gum is chicle. We know the word as a modern name brand for gum, Chiclets.