STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN—According to a Cosmos Magazine report, scientists have recovered DNA from pieces of birch bark chewed into sticky pitch by toolmaking hunters and fishers some 10,000 years ago. Archaeologists Per Persson and Mikael Manninen of the University of Oslo found the chewed bits of “gum” at a Mesolithic campsite on Sweden’s west coast, and asked Natalija Kashuba, then a researcher at Oslo’s Museum of Cultural History, to check them for genetic material. Although the style of artifacts at the site suggests the people who camped there came from the east, in what is now Russia, the DNA analysis indicates the two women and one man who chewed on these pieces of bark actually came from Europe, to the south. Persson explained that DNA obtained from such gums at other sites could offer information about migration patterns, relationships, diseases, and food preferences. To read about an engraved pendant dating to around the same period, go to “Mesolithic Markings.”
DNA Extracted From Sweden’s Prehistoric “Chewing Gum”
News May 17, 2019
Recommended Articles
Top 10 Discoveries of 2020 January/February 2021
Largest Viking DNA Study
Northern Europe and Greenland
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2023
Closely Knit
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2023
Farmers and Foragers
-
Features March/April 2019
Sicily's Lost Theater
Archaeologists resume the search for the home of drama in a majestic Greek sanctuary
(Giuseppe Cavaleri) -
Letter From Texas March/April 2019
On the Range
Excavations at a ranch in the southern High Plains show how generations of people adapted to an iconic Western landscape
(Eric A. Powell) -
Artifacts March/April 2019
Medieval Seal Stamp
(Rikke Caroline Olsen/The National Museum of Denmark) -
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2019
Fairfield's Rebirth in 3-D
(Virginia Department of Historic Resources)