The Jerusalem Post

5,700-year-old chewing gum yields secrets of a Stone-Age girl’s life

- • By THERESA BRAINE

An ancient wad of chewing gum has yielded a complete human genome, enough informatio­n for researcher­s to reconstruc­t the visage of a girl who lived 5,700 years ago in what is now Denmark.

It marks the first time a full genome has been extracted from anything other than bone, the researcher­s said.

“It is amazing to have gotten a complete ancient human genome from anything other than bone,” University of Copenhagen associate professor Hannes Schroeder, who led the research, said in a statement Tuesday.

“What is more, we also retrieved DNA from oral microbes and several important human pathogens, which makes this a very valuable source of ancient DNA, especially for time periods where we have no human remains.”

The “gum” is made of birch pitch, and was chewed by a female, the analysis showed. The researcher­s were able to deduce enough to get a glimpse of the girl’s life. Geneticall­y, she bore closer resemblanc­e to mainland Europe’s hunter-gatherers than to her contempora­ry inhabitant­s of central Scandinavi­a, the researcher­s said in the study, published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

In addition, she was shown to have dark skin and hair and blue eyes. They were also able to determine that a recent meal probably consisted of duck and hazelnuts. The gum also contained more than 40 types of microbes, The Guardian reported.

Lola, as the researcher­s named her – after the island of Lolland, where the wad was found – lived around 3,700 BCE, according to National Geographic, and was lactose-intolerant.

Birch pitch is a black-brown substance made by heating birch bark that was used as an adhesive starting in the Middle Pleistocen­e Era, which stretches back to between 760,000 and 126,000 years ago, according to USA Today. Small lumps bearing tooth marks have been found before and indicate that birch pitch was masticated, but DNA has only been present in fragments, such as with an 8,000-year-old piece of it found a year ago, according to the journal Science.

The pitch was made into glue by the chewing, Science noted, and Scandinavi­an hunter-gatherers used it frequently to craft their tools. It also may have been used as a “prehistori­c toothbrush,” The Guardian noted, because such tar has been found to contain juvenile tooth marks, and is known for its antiseptic properties.

The excavation, at a site called Syltholm in southern Denmark, is being overseen by the Museum Lolland-Falster during the constructi­on of a tunnel to connect Denmark and Germany.

“Syltholm is completely unique. Almost everything is sealed in mud, which means that the preservati­on of organic remains is absolutely phenomenal,” said Theis Jensen, a University of Copenhagen Globe Institute post-doctoral student who both worked on the study for his PhD and also participat­ed in the excavation­s at Syltholm.

(New York Daily News/TNS)

 ?? (TNS) ?? ‘IT IS AMAZING to have gotten a complete ancient human genome from anything other than bone,’ such as this ancient chewing gum.
(TNS) ‘IT IS AMAZING to have gotten a complete ancient human genome from anything other than bone,’ such as this ancient chewing gum.

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