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July 30, 2025

This may be what 2,500-year-old honey looks like

This is likely what 2,500-year-old honey looks like, according to new tests using modern techniques. Credit: Luciana da Costa Carvalho
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This is likely what 2,500-year-old honey looks like, according to new tests using modern techniques. Credit: Luciana da Costa Carvalho

Decades ago, archaeologists discovered a sticky substance in a copper jar in an ancient Greek shrine. Until recently, the identity of the residue was still murky—is it a mixture of fats, oils and beeswax or something else?

Researchers in the Journal of the American Chemical Society have reanalyzed samples of the residue using modern analytical techniques and determined that it is likely the remains of ancient —a conclusion that previous analyses rejected.

Honey was an important substance in the ancient world, sometimes left in shrines as offerings to the gods or buried alongside the dead. In 1954, one such underground Greek shrine dating to around 520 BCE was discovered in Paestum, Italy—about a 1.5-hour drive from Pompeii. Inside were several bronze jars containing a sticky residue.

At the time, archaeologists assumed it was honey, originally offered as honeycombs. Then, three different teams over the course of 30 years analyzed the residue but failed to confirm the presence of honey, instead concluding that the jars contained some sort of animal or vegetable fat contaminated with pollen and insect parts.

But when the residue came to the Ashmolean Museum for an exhibition, a team of researchers led by Luciana da Costa Carvalho and James McCullagh had a chance to reexamine the mystery substance and collect new scientific evidence.

The researchers analyzed samples of the residue using several modern analytical techniques to determine its molecular makeup. They found that:

This bronze jar on display at the Ashmolean Museum contained a mysterious substance (shown in the foreground) that is very likely ancient honey. Credit: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c04888
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This bronze jar on display at the Ashmolean Museum contained a mysterious substance (shown in the foreground) that is very likely ancient honey. Credit: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c04888

These results suggest that the ancient substance is what is left of ancient honey. However, the researchers can't exclude the possibility that other bee products may also be present.

"Ancient residues aren't just traces of what people ate or offered to the gods—they are complex chemical ecosystems," explains da Costa Carvalho. "Studying them reveals how those substances changed over time, opening the door to future work on ancient microbial activity and its possible applications."

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More information: A Symbol of Immortality: Evidence of Honey in Bronze Jars Found in a Paestum Shrine Dating to 530-510 BCE, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025).

Journal information: Journal of the American Chemical Society

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Modern analytical techniques identified a 2,500-year-old residue from a Greek shrine as likely ancient honey, based on its chemical fingerprint, high hexose sugar content, and presence of royal jelly proteins. The residue's composition closely matches modern honey and beeswax, though other bee products may also be present.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.