Birch bark tar, the oldest glue in the world, was in use for at least 50,000 years, from the Palaeolithic Period up until the time of the Gauls. Made by heating birch bark, it served as an adhesive for hafting tools and decorating objects.
But by studying artefacts that date back to the first six centuries AD through the lens of chemistry, archaeology, and textual analysis, researchers from the CNRS, Universite Nice Sophia Antipolis / Universite Cote d'Azur, and Inrap have discovered birch tar was being used right up to late antiquity, if not longer.
The artefacts in question -- found in a region where birch is scarce, thus raising the question of how it was procured -- are testimony to the strength of tradition among the Gauls.
The scientists' findings are published in Antiquity.
Source: CNRS [November 13, 2019]
* This article was originally published here
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