Current:Home > reviewsDNA from 10,000-year-old "chewing gum" sheds light on teens' Stone Age menu and oral health: "It must have hurt" -CapitalTrack
DNA from 10,000-year-old "chewing gum" sheds light on teens' Stone Age menu and oral health: "It must have hurt"
View
Date:2025-04-14 03:12:59
DNA from a type of "chewing gum" used by teenagers in Sweden 10,000 years ago is shedding new light on the Stone Age diet and oral health, researchers said Tuesday.
The wads of gum are made of pieces of birch bark pitch, a tar-like black resin, and are combined with saliva, with teeth marks clearly visible.
They were found 30 years ago next to bones at the 9,700-year-old Huseby Klev archaeological site north of Sweden's western city of Gothenburg, one of the country's oldest sites for human fossils.
The hunter-gatherers most likely chewed the resin "to be used as glue" to assemble tools and weapons, said Anders Gotherstrom, co-author of a study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
"This is a most likely hypothesis -- they could of course have been chewed just because they liked them or because they thought that they had some medicinal purpose," he told AFP.
The gum was typically chewed by both male and female adolescents.
"There were several chewing gum (samples) and both males and females chewed them. Most of them seem to have been chewed by teenagers," Gotherstrom said. "There was some kind of age to it."
A previous 2019 study of the wads of gum mapped the genetic profile of the individuals who had chewed it.
This time, Gotherstrom and his team of paleontologists at Stockholm University were able to determine, again from the DNA found in the gum, that the teenagers' Stone Age diet included deer, trout and hazelnuts.
Traces of apple, duck and fox were also detected.
"If we do a human bone then we'll get human DNA. We can do teeth and then we'll get a little bit more. But here we'll get DNA from what they had been chewing previously," Gotherstrom said. "You cannot get that in any other way."
Identifying the different species mixed in the DNA was challenging, according to Dr. Andrés Aravena, a scientist at Istanbul University who spent a lot of time on the computer analyzing the data.
"We had to apply several computational heavy analytical tools to single out the different species and organisms. All the tools we needed were not ready to be applied to ancient DNA; but much of our time was spent on adjusting them so that we could apply them", Aravena said in a statement.
The scientists also found at least one of the teens had serious oral health issues. In one piece chewed by a teenage girl, researchers found "a number of bacteria indicating a severe case of periodontitis," a severe gum infection.
"She would probably start to lose her teeth shortly after chewing this chewing gum. It must have hurt as well," said Gotherstrom.
"You have the imprint from the teenager's mouth who chewed it thousands of years ago. If you want to put some kind of a philosophical layer into it, for us it connects artefacts, the DNA and humans," he said.
In 2019, scientists constructed an image of a woman based on the DNA extracted from 5,700-year-old chewing gum. She likely had dark skin, brown hair and blue eyes, and hailed from Syltholm on Lolland, a Danish island in the Baltic Sea. Researchers nicknamed the woman "Lola."
Researchers at the time said it was the first time an entire ancient human genome had been obtained from anything other than human bone.
Sophie Lewis contributed to this report.
- In:
- DNA
- Sweden
veryGood! (2)
Related
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds Are Très Chic During Romantic Paris Getaway
- Botched Patient Born With Pig Nose Details Heartbreaking Story of Lifelong Bullying
- Rare glimpse inside neighborhood at the center of Haiti's gang war
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- You'll Be Begging for Mercy After Seeing This Sizzling Photo of Shirtless Shawn Mendes
- 4 crew members on Australian army helicopter that crashed off coast didn’t survive, officials say
- T3 Hair Tools Blowout Sale: Curling Irons, Hair Dryers, and Flat Irons for Just $60
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Biden has decided to keep Space Command in Colorado, rejecting move to Alabama, officials tell AP
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- West Virginia University President E. Gordon Gee given contract extension
- Damar Hamlin puts aside fear and practices in pads for the first time since cardiac arrest
- 8-year-old survives cougar attack in Washington state national park
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- 4 crew members on Australian army helicopter that crashed off coast didn’t survive, officials say
- California juvenile hall on lockdown after disturbance of youth assaulting staff
- Twitter, now called X, reinstates Kanye West's account
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
6-year-old girl dead after being struck by family's boat at lake
Cycling Star Magnus White Dead at 17 After Being Struck By Car During Bike Ride
Ohio man convicted of abuse of corpse and evidence tampering 13 years after Kentucky teenager Paige Johnson disappeared
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Ukraine says Russian missiles hit another apartment building and likely trapped people under rubble
Rapper G Herbo pleads guilty in credit card fraud scheme, faces up to 25 years in prison
Cardi B retaliates, throws microphone at fan who doused her with drink onstage in Vegas