Ancient extinct 'miracle' plant may have been rediscovered in Turkey
By T.K. Randall
October 4, 2022
The Romans used silphion extensively. Image Credit: CC BY 2.0 Phillip Capper
A plant once known as silphion may still be around today despite disappearing 2,000 years ago.
This highly valued yellow-flowered plant has appeared in numerous texts from ancient Rome, Greece and Egypt and once grew primarily in the ancient city of Cyrene in what is now Libya.
It was considered so valuable, in fact, that even the city's coinage depicted images of it.
Silphion was used for many things, including as a treatment for various ailments and diseases, as an aphrodisiac, as a perfume, as seasoning for food and even as a contraceptive.
Eventually, though, like all things taken from nature in excess, the plant disappeared, with the Roman Emperor Nero himself allegedly consuming the last remaining supply some 2,000 years ago.
For decades, modern day researchers have attempted to track down a living specimen of the plant to no avail, but now, a researcher from Istanbul University believes that he may have made a breakthrough after examining a rather familiar plant found high up in the mountains.
Known as ferula drudeana, this particular plant appears to be so similar to ancient silphion that it might actually be silphion - located in plain sight all along right under the researchers' noses.
Furthermore, evidence suggests that the locations in Turkey at which the plant has been found happen to correspond to places where the ancient Greeks once settled.
So while we don't currently know for absolute certain that ferula drudeana is ancient silphion, right now it's looking like an extremely promising candidate.
Sophien Kamoun
@KamounLab
·
Follow
Ferula drudeana. Apiales—is it the presumed extinct silphion? https://apple.news/AN6teuctVRl2ZC1FGYlWjlQ
6:42 AM · Sep 24, 2022
https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/360956/ancient-extinct-miracle-plant-may-have-been-rediscovered-in-turkey
Thanks to: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com
By T.K. Randall
October 4, 2022
The Romans used silphion extensively. Image Credit: CC BY 2.0 Phillip Capper
A plant once known as silphion may still be around today despite disappearing 2,000 years ago.
This highly valued yellow-flowered plant has appeared in numerous texts from ancient Rome, Greece and Egypt and once grew primarily in the ancient city of Cyrene in what is now Libya.
It was considered so valuable, in fact, that even the city's coinage depicted images of it.
Silphion was used for many things, including as a treatment for various ailments and diseases, as an aphrodisiac, as a perfume, as seasoning for food and even as a contraceptive.
Eventually, though, like all things taken from nature in excess, the plant disappeared, with the Roman Emperor Nero himself allegedly consuming the last remaining supply some 2,000 years ago.
For decades, modern day researchers have attempted to track down a living specimen of the plant to no avail, but now, a researcher from Istanbul University believes that he may have made a breakthrough after examining a rather familiar plant found high up in the mountains.
Known as ferula drudeana, this particular plant appears to be so similar to ancient silphion that it might actually be silphion - located in plain sight all along right under the researchers' noses.
Furthermore, evidence suggests that the locations in Turkey at which the plant has been found happen to correspond to places where the ancient Greeks once settled.
So while we don't currently know for absolute certain that ferula drudeana is ancient silphion, right now it's looking like an extremely promising candidate.
Sophien Kamoun
@KamounLab
·
Follow
Ferula drudeana. Apiales—is it the presumed extinct silphion? https://apple.news/AN6teuctVRl2ZC1FGYlWjlQ
6:42 AM · Sep 24, 2022
https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/360956/ancient-extinct-miracle-plant-may-have-been-rediscovered-in-turkey
Thanks to: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com