Bohman, Björn
- Department of Plant Protection Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- University of Western Australia
Research article2024Peer reviewedOpen access
Sallon, Sarah; Solowey, Elaine; Gostel, Morgan R.; Egli, Markus; Flematti, Gavin R.; Bohman, Bjorn; Schaeffer, Philippe; Adam, Pierre; Weeks, Andrea
A seed recovered during archaeological excavations of a cave in the Judean desert was germinated, with radiocarbon analysis indicating an age of 993 CE- 1202 calCE. DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis identified the seedling as belonging to the angiosperm genus Commiphora Jacq., sister to three Southern African Commiphora species, but unique from all other species sampled to date. The germinated seedling was not closely related to Commiphora species commonly harvested for their fragrant oleoresins including Commiphora gileadensis (L.) C.Chr., candidate for the locally extinct "Judean Balsam" or "Balm of Gilead" of antiquity. GC-MS analysis revealed minimal fragrant compounds but abundance of those associated with multi-target bioactivity and a previously undescribed glycolipid compound series. Several hypotheses are offered to explain the origins, implications and ethnobotanical significance of this unknown Commiphora sp., to the best of our knowledge the first identified from an archaeological site in this region, including identification with a resin producing tree mentioned in Biblical sources and possible agricultural relationship with the historic Judean Balsam.
Communications biology
2024, Volume: 7, number: 1, article number: 1109Publisher: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Biological Systematics
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06721-5
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/132659