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Ancient Civilizations

Ancient Arabia’s Hidden Treasures: Uncovering 2,700-Year-Old Knowledge of Psychoactive and Medicinal Plants

A new study uses metabolic profiling to uncover ancient knowledge systems behind therapeutic and psychoactive plant use in ancient Arabia.

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The ancient civilization of Arabia was once home to a rich and diverse culture that valued knowledge, trade, and innovation. New research has shed light on one of the most fascinating aspects of their history: the deliberate use of psychoactive and medicinal plants for therapeutic and sensorial practices nearly 2,700 years ago.

Led by Dr. Barbara Huber and Professor Marta Luciani, a team of researchers analyzed organic residues preserved inside Iron Age fumigation devices excavated at the oasis settlement of Qurayyah in northwestern Saudi Arabia. Using advanced metabolic profiling techniques, they detected characteristic harmala alkaloids from the plant Peganum harmala, also known as Syrian rue or harmal.

“This discovery represents chemical evidence for the earliest known burning of harmal not just in Arabia but globally,” says Dr. Huber, lead author of the study. “Our findings shed light on how ancient communities drew upon traditional plant knowledge and their local pharmacopeia to care for their health, purify spaces, and potentially trigger psychoactive effects.”

The integration of biomolecular analysis with archaeology has allowed researchers to identify not just what kind of plants people were using but also where, how, and why. This breakthrough has significant implications for fields such as ethnobotany, medical anthropology, heritage studies, and pharmacognosy – all concerned with the long-term relationship between humans, medicinal plants, and natural resources.

In traditional medicine and household fumigation practices today in the region, Peganum harmala is known for its antibacterial, psychoactive, and therapeutic properties. The new findings underscore its long-standing cultural and medicinal significance.

“This discovery shows the deep historical roots of traditional healing and fumigation practices in Arabia,” adds Ahmed M. Abualhassan, Heritage Commission co-director of the Qurayyah project. “We’re preserving not only objects but also the intangible cultural heritage of ancient knowledge that still holds relevance in local communities today.”

Ancient Civilizations

Reviving an Ancient Hue: Researchers Recreate Egyptian Blue Pigment

Researchers have recreated the world’s oldest synthetic pigment, called Egyptian blue, which was used in ancient Egypt about 5,000 years ago.

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The world’s oldest synthetic pigment, Egyptian blue, has been recreated by a team of researchers from Washington State University. This breakthrough, published in the journal NPJ Heritage Science, provides valuable insights for archaeologists and conservation scientists studying ancient Egyptian materials.

Led by John McCloy, director of WSU’s School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, the research team collaborated with the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian’s Museum Conservation Institute to develop 12 recipes for the pigment. These recipes utilized a variety of raw materials and heating times, replicating temperatures available to ancient artists.

Egyptian blue was highly valued in ancient times due to its unique properties and versatility. It was used as a substitute for expensive minerals like turquoise or lapis lazuli and applied to wood, stone, and cartonnage – a papier-mâché-type material. Depending on its ingredients and processing time, the pigment’s color ranged from deep blue to dull gray or green.

The researchers’ work aimed to highlight how modern science can reveal hidden stories in ancient Egyptian objects. After the Egyptians, the pigment was used by Romans, but by the Renaissance period, the knowledge of how it was made had largely been forgotten.

In recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in Egyptian blue due to its intriguing properties and potential new technological applications. The pigment emits light in the near-infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum, which people can’t see, making it suitable for fingerprinting and counterfeit-proof inks. It also shares similar chemistry with high-temperature superconductors.

To understand the makeup of Egyptian blue, the researchers created 12 different recipes using mixtures of silicon dioxide, copper, calcium, and sodium carbonate. They heated the material at around 1000 degrees Celsius for between one and 11 hours to replicate temperatures available to ancient artists. After cooling the samples at various rates, they studied the pigments using modern microscopy and analysis techniques that had never been used for this type of research.

The researchers found that Egyptian blue is highly heterogeneous, with different people making the pigment and transporting it to final uses elsewhere. Small differences in the process resulted in very different outcomes. In fact, to get the bluest color required only about 50% of the blue-colored components, regardless of the rest of the mixture’s composition.

The samples created are currently on display at Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and will become part of the museum’s new long-term gallery focused on ancient Egypt. This research serves as a prime example of how science can shed light on our human past, revealing hidden stories in ancient objects and materials.

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Ancient Civilizations

The Great Barrier Reef’s Resilience: Lessons from a Geological Time Capsule

New research adds to our understanding of how rapidly rising sea levels due to climate change foreshadow the end of the Great Barrier Reef as we know it. The findings suggest the reef can withstand rising sea levels in isolation but is vulnerable to associated environmental stressors arising from global climate change.

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The Great Barrier Reef, one of the world’s most iconic natural wonders, has been facing unprecedented threats due to climate change. Rising sea levels, more frequent heatwaves, and extensive bleaching have pushed the reef to the brink of collapse. However, a new study led by Professor Jody Webster from the University of Sydney suggests that the reef may be more resilient than previously thought.

The research, published in Nature Communications, draws on a geological time capsule of fossil reef cores extracted from the seabed under the Great Barrier Reef. The findings indicate that rapid sea level rise alone did not spell the end of the reef’s predecessor, Reef 4. Instead, it was the combination of environmental stressors such as poor water quality and warming climates that led to its demise about 10,000 years ago.

The study reveals that Reef 4, also known as the proto-Great Barrier Reef, had a similar morphology and mix of coral reef communities to the modern Great Barrier Reef. The types of algae and corals, and their growth rates, are comparable. Understanding the environmental changes that influenced it and led to its ultimate demise offers clues on what might happen to the modern reef.

Professor Webster and his colleagues used radiometric dating and reef habitat information to accurately pinpoint core samples pertaining to Meltwater pulse 1B, a period when global sea levels rose very rapidly. The cores underpinning this research were obtained under the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP), an international marine research collaboration involving 21 nations.

The findings lend weight to already grave concerns about the Great Barrier Reef’s future. If the current trajectory continues, we should be concerned about whether the reef will survive the next 50 to 100 years in its current state. However, the study suggests that a healthy, active barrier reef can grow well in response to quite fast sea level rises.

The importance of learning from the past and understanding how reef and coastal ecosystems have responded to rapid environmental changes cannot be overstated. These data allow us to more precisely understand how reef and coastal ecosystems have responded to rapid environmental changes, like the rises in sea level and temperature we face today.

As we move forward with climate change mitigation efforts, it is crucial that we take a holistic approach, considering not only the direct impacts of rising sea levels but also the associated environmental stressors. By doing so, we may be able to prevent or slow down the decline of the Great Barrier Reef and ensure its continued resilience for generations to come.

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Ancient Civilizations

Unlocking the Secrets of Ancient Human Remains: A New Method for Accessing Proteins in Soft Tissues

A new method could soon unlock the vast repository of biological information held in the proteins of ancient soft tissues. The findings could open up a new era for palaeobiological discovery.

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The article you provided is a fascinating study on a groundbreaking method for extracting and identifying proteins from ancient human soft tissues. Here’s a rewritten version, maintaining the core ideas but improving clarity, structure, and style:

Unlocking the Secrets of Ancient Human Remains: A New Method for Accessing Proteins in Soft Tissues

A team of researchers at the University of Oxford has developed a revolutionary method that could soon unlock the vast repository of biological information held in the proteins of ancient human soft tissues. This discovery, published in PLOS ONE, opens up a new era for palaeobiological discovery and promises to vastly expand our understanding of ancient diet, disease, environment, and evolutionary relationships.

Up until now, studies on ancient proteins have been confined largely to mineralized tissues such as bones and teeth. However, the internal organs – which are a far richer source of biological information – have remained inaccessible due to the lack of an established protocol for their analysis. This new method changes that.

A key hurdle was finding an effective way to disrupt cell membranes to liberate proteins. The team discovered that urea successfully broke open cells and released proteins within. After extraction, the proteins were then separated using liquid chromatography and identified using mass spectrometry. By coupling this step with high-field asymmetric-waveform ion mobility spectrometry (which separates ions based on how they move in an electric field), the researchers found that they could increase the number of proteins identified by up to 40%.

This technique makes it possible to recover proteins from samples that are hard to analyze, including degraded or very complex mixtures. The team was able to identify over 1,200 ancient proteins from just 2.5 mg of sample – a feat that has never been achieved before.

Using the combined method, the researchers identified a diverse array of proteins that govern healthy brain function, reflecting the molecular complexity of the human nervous system. They also identified potential biomarkers for neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s and multiple sclerosis. This new technique opens a window on human history we haven’t looked through before.

The vast majority of human diseases – including psychiatric illness and mental health disorders – leave no marks on the bone, making them essentially invisible in the archaeological record. This discovery promises to transform our understanding of ancient human health and disease.

Senior author Professor Roman Fischer, Centre for Medicines Discovery at the University of Oxford, added: “By enabling the retrieval of protein biomarkers from ancient soft tissues, this workflow allows us to investigate pathology beyond the skeleton, transforming our ability to understand the health of past populations.”

This method has already attracted interest for its applicability to a wide range of archaeological materials and environments – from mummified remains to bog bodies, and from antibodies to peptide hormones. As Dr Christiana Scheib, Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge, noted: “Ancient soft tissues are so rarely preserved, yet could hold such powerful information regarding evolutionary history.”

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