Science Extinct Biblical Tree Resurrected From Ancient Seed Found In Cave

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A 1,000-year-old seed discovered in a cave in the Judean desert has sprouted, grown and reached maturity, and appears to have medicinal qualities.

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Commiphora caudata leaves. This tree may be a close relative to “Sheba”, a young Commiphora tree ... [+]
Vinayaraj via a Creative Commons license


A mysterious ancient seed recovered during archaeological excavations of a cave near Jerusalem has grown into a tree that may be the source of a medicinal balm mentioned in the Bible, according to a newly published study.

The seed was discovered in a Judean Desert cave in the late 1980s, and radiocarbon analysis indicated it was approximately 1,000 years old. The seed likely survived from a now-extinct population of trees that existed in the Southern Levant, a region comprising modern-day Israel, Palestine and Jordan, and is the first of its kind to be found there.

Tests suggested that the 2 cm long (slightly less than 1 inch; Figure 1a) seed was still viable, so the research team planted and carefully tended it. It took around five weeks to sprout. Now, 14 years later, the tree has reached maturity (Figure 1). Researchers named their tree “Sheba” to honor of the Queen, Sheba, who brought the balsam root from Arabia to King Solomon as a gift.
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F I G U R E 1 : (a) ancient seed prior to planting (b) developing seed at 5 weeks showing epicotyl and developing cotyledons covered by seed coat (c) seedling (6 months) (d) peeling bark (12 years) (e) leaves showing fine hairs (12 years) (f) mature tree (12 years). Permission for the use of pictures shown in Fig. 1 (a) and (c-f) was provided by Mr Guy Eisner and for Fig. 1 (b) by Dr Elaine Solowey.
doi:10.1038/s42003-024-06721-5


“Sheba” is approximately 3 m (10 feet) tall, its bark is pale green-brown and peels in thin, papery sheets revealing a dark green, possibly photosynthetic, bark below. “Sheba” is deciduous, shedding its leaves during the cooler months of December through April.

“‘Sheba’, an unknown Commiphora species with a unique genetic fingerprint, may represent an extinct taxon once native to this region whose resin ‘tsori’ mentioned in Biblical texts was valuable, associated with healing but not described as fragrant,” summarized the researchers in their study.

DNA analysis revealed that “Sheba” is a unique species of Commiphora, which are distributed across Africa, Madagascar and the Arabian Peninsula and known for their aromatic gum resins. With approximately 190 scientifically described species known, the drought-resistant Commiphora is the most species-rich genus of flowering plants in the frankincense and myrrh family, Burseraceae. Historically, these highly fragrant species provided highly prized aromatic resins that served as the basis for various fragrances, incenses and for medicinal uses.

However, GC-MS analysis has detected minimal fragrance from the leaves, bark and resin, indicating that “Sheba” is probably an extinct species of Commiphora that instead creates a resinous healing extract. Indeed, wounding the bark produces a small amount of clear oleoresin, which has been used to reduce inflammation in human patients. The researchers also found an oil, a type of squalene, also with antioxidant properties that may have been applied topically to lubricate and protect the skin.

Because the seed was found in a cave, it is likely that the people living in the region planted these trees, suggesting that they were aware of its medicinal qualities. Thus, the research team proposes that resin from the tree might be the mysterious “tsori,” a medicinal compound mentioned several times in the bible. Tsori was highly prized in the ancient world and was exported throughout the Roman Empire. Previous research suggested that in addition to its healing properties, tsori was used as a perfume and incense, for embalming, and even as an antidote to poisons.

That said, currently, it is unclear what species “Sheba” belongs to, because the tree has not flowered, and therefore hasn’t produced the reproductive material scientists need to carry out more detailed species-level analyses. At this time, it is not clear if “Sheba” will ever flower.

Nonetheless, the researchers concluded that “Sheba” represents an extinct lineage of trees that was once widespread and common throughout the Levant but seems to have disappeared by the 9th century. Of course, this points to the important question: why did these trees go extinct?
 
How many ridiculous gardening remedies have they tried to make the tree flower? My personal favorite is tapping on the trunk with a rubber mallet. Best accomplished at 2 am. Seriously. A gardening store owner with a radio show said so.
 
Jews are about to make a killing on this frankincense.
Frankincense is aromatic though, not odorless.
Odd, why do you have so much knowledge of Jewish industries?
I read wikipedia.
Found the Jew!
Hey, I said I read wikipedia, not that I was an editor.
The nerve of some people...
>Tablet Country

>Tablet


> Tablet Magazine
Tablet is a online magazine focused on Jewish news and culture.[1][2]
:thinking:
 
What could have happened a thousand years ago that could have made a species of tree go extinct?
:thinking:

Spoiler: Islam and it's deleterious dictates on land magangment
Actual legitimate climate change from changes in weather, and planetary patterns not the fake and gay ClimateChangeTM that is giant kickbacks to scientific NGOs that funnel money to leftist causes.
Also think a man named ghenghis khan who turned the middle east from a place of scientific freedom and tolerance into a backwaters lol.
Though I can imagine desertifcation caused by only the dumbest elements surviving ghenghis khan didn't help either @not william stenchever
 
What could have happened a thousand years ago that could have made a species of tree go extinct?
:thinking:

Spoiler: Islam and it's deleterious dictates on land magangment
maybe, or it could have been anything else. I have a feeling species pop into existence and fade back into the background very quickly and only a few species are robust enough to last.
 
Now I'm retarded when it comes to ecosystems. I don't really understand more then the basic concepts but should we bring back extinct plants and animals. It feels like it could cause a lot of unintended consequences no?
 
Why does it have to be any one cause?
Prolonged climate change over a long enough period to be imperceptible to the average person paired with the destruction of infrastructures that bring water inland multiple times, along with poor land management practices and overgrazing all sound like a perfect storm to me.

It isn't like this is something that just happened all at once.
 
Bronze Age collapse didn't cause the whole region to devolve into illiterate nomads, desertification of the Middle East was going on for a while, destroying the irrigations cemented it.
When bronze age civilization collapsed illiterate sand people did in fact move in to the ruins and thought "these fields would make great pastures for my livestock". Those illiterate sand people did, however, evolve into more cultured people as the new overlords of the devastated populace. What Islam got horribly right was using the written word to create a self-replicating hellscape where any voice of reform or reason was violently cut down.
 
Mohammed was very smart a schizophrenic pedophile and anyone doubting his word must be killed.
Mohammad was illiterate which means he must have dictated the Quran to someone to write down. Which makes me wonder, what if the Quran wasn't actually originally a religious document and instead was essentially just an archive of the ramblings of an illiterate pedophile. In other words, Muhammad was a lolcow and the Quran is his KF thread.
 
Spoiler: Islam and it's deleterious dictates on land magangment
Bedouins call themselves "Sons of the Desert." I read a quip somewhere that said they should properly be called its father due to the unfortunate tendency of goats to denude any land they graze upon.
Middle East being a desert now was caused by Mongols destroying the irrigation systems that were there 800 years ago.
The only irrigation system I'm aware of that Mongol's destroyed was Baghdad's, which was actually pre-Islamic and I'm not even sure the Muzzies of the Baghdad Caliphate knew how to do much more than maintain. IIRC the Mongols were actually beaten at Cairo and advanced no further because they spent too much time faffing around/doing a thorough job of it in Baghdad.
 
Is photosynthetic bark common?
Edit: apparently yes, and I was not aware of this, truly every days a learning day on the farms
This is really cool. These resinous plants are packed with potentially medicinal compounds.
Now we just need to find some for silphium.
I hope they do, and many more medicinal plants
Now I'm retarded when it comes to ecosystems. I don't really understand more than the basic concepts but should we bring back extinct plants and animals. It feels like it could cause a lot of unintended consequences no?
I feel like a plant would have fewer consequences than an animal or pathogen but I’ll be honest I’m basing that on a gut feeling.
 
Mohammad was illiterate which means he must have dictated the Quran to someone to write down. Which makes me wonder, what if the Quran wasn't actually originally a religious document and instead was essentially just an archive of the ramblings of an illiterate pedophile. In other words, Muhammad was a lolcow and the Quran is his KF thread.
When you think of it, Christianity was a memetic weapon Apostole Paul (Wikipedia early life identity: Saul) used to destroy the Roman Empire from the inside, which worked but also hilariously backfired on the Jews for the next thousand years like all their golems tend to.
 
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