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Birch Tar Made With Neanderthal Methods Shows Antibiotic Activity, Study Finds

Researchers recreated birch tar with Stone Age techniques, then found it inhibited Staphylococcus in lab tests.

Overview

  • Published in PLOS One, the study led by Tjaark Siemssen tested birch tar produced via clay‑pit distillation, stone condensation, and an ethnographic tin method.
  • Most samples suppressed Staphylococcus aureus linked to wound infections, while none affected Escherichia coli, indicating selective efficacy against gram‑positive bacteria.
  • The results align with Indigenous uses of birch tar for wound care by groups such as the Mi'kmaq, Saami, and Yakut, supporting possible medicinal application in prehistory.
  • The authors suggest a palaeopharmacology approach could inform modern antimicrobial discovery during a worsening antibiotic‑resistance crisis.
  • External experts praise the experimental evidence yet caution that proving deliberate medicinal manufacture by Neanderthals requires further archaeological or biomolecular corroboration.