
What a 5,700-Year-Old Piece of Gum Reveals About Its Chewer
What a 5,700-Year-Old Piece of Gum Reveals About Its Chewer
Science, Spoken · SpokenLayer
December 23, 20197m 11s
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Show Notes
Nearly 6,000 years ago, in a seaside marshland in what is now southern Denmark, a woman with blue eyes and dark hair and skin popped a piece of chewing gum in her mouth. Not spearmint gum, mind you, but a decidedly less palatable chunk of black-brown pitch, boiled down from the bark of the birch tree. An indispensable tool in her time, birch pitch would solidify as it cooled, so the woman and her comrades would have had to chew it before using it as a sort of superglue for, say, making tools.
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