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Judi Lynn

(162,491 posts)
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 07:05 AM Sep 24

Lost Biblical tree resurrected from 1,000-year-old mystery seed found in the Judean Desert

By Sascha Pare published 21 hours ago

Scientists have grown an ancient seed from a cave in the Judean Desert into a tree — and it could belong to a locally-extinct species with medicinal properties mentioned several times in the Bible.



A collage of two pictures showing a small tree standing in a pot in a greenhouse.
Researchers planted the ancient seed in 2010, more than 20 years after it was discovered in the Judean Desert. (Image credit: Dr. Sarah Sallon)

Scientists have revived a mysterious, 1,000-year-old seed discovered in the Judean Desert — and the tree that has grown from it could belong to a lost lineage mentioned in the Bible, they say.

It has taken researchers almost 14 years to grow a tree from the ancient seed, which archaeologists excavated from a cave in the late 1980s. Dubbed "Sheba," the cryptic specimen now stands around 10 feet (3 meters) tall, meaning scientists can finally describe its fully-fledged characteristics. They were also able to perform DNA, chemical and radiocarbon analyses of the tree, revealing new clues about its origins, according to a study published Sept. 10 in the journal Communications Biology.

The seed from which Sheba grew dates to between A.D. 993 and 1202, according to the study.
It 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.

Remarkably, researchers say the fully-grown specimen could be the source of Biblical "tsori" — a resinous extract associated with healing in Genesis, Jeremiah and Ezekiel.

"The identity of Biblical 'tsori' (translated in English as 'balm') has long been open to debate," the researchers wrote in the study. The substance is linked with the historical region of Gilead, which sits to the east of the Jordan River between the Yarmuk River and the northern end of the Dead Sea. Now, having revived Sheba, the team thinks it has finally unraveled the mystery behind Biblical tsori.

More:
https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/plants/lost-biblical-tree-resurrected-from-1-000-year-old-mystery-seed-found-in-the-judean-desert

(My bolding)

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Lost Biblical tree resurrected from 1,000-year-old mystery seed found in the Judean Desert (Original Post) Judi Lynn Sep 24 OP
Some have the one mentioned that in the text was the Cottonwood. multigraincracker Sep 24 #1
Clone, clone, clone before some protestor takes a chainsaw to it /nt bucolic_frolic Sep 24 #2
The "Balm of Giliad" ... marble falls Sep 24 #3

multigraincracker

(34,194 posts)
1. Some have the one mentioned that in the text was the Cottonwood.
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 07:25 AM
Sep 24

I bought a bottle of Cottonwood tincture from a lady that makes it. Googled it and it is amazing and very historic.

marble falls

(62,394 posts)
3. The "Balm of Giliad" ...
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 09:02 AM
Sep 24

... They've been pulling good DNA from ground underneath ice caps. There are mammoth remains found in condition that there is a cult of those who eat it. Think of all the dormant seed from now extinct species there are.

Anasazi beans are from beans found in pueblos abandoned for a 1,000 years, in storage jars.

Things like these give me hope.

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