The investigation began when Luciana Da Costa Carvalho, the chemistry at Oxford University, has turned her attention to eight tractor found in 1954 in an underground refuge in Beesome, a Greek city in southern Italy. Although archaeologists originally suspect that the container was storing honey for its sweet smell and yellow color, many analyzes in the following decades have never discovered sugars.
According to the living science portal, everything changed with the use of modern spectral measurement techniques and protein analysis. For the first time, scientists found healthy hexagues, such as fructose, as well as the typical royal gel proteins produced by bees, as well as Apis Mellifera, European bee. This chemical composition is almost identical to the current honeywax and beeswax, which leads to the conclusion that the fungal element in the jars is, in fact, a mile (perhaps in the form of preferences).
The preservation of these amazing ingredients is due to the presence of copper ions in the waste, with the properties of vital pesticides, which have seized the attack of microorganisms and the preserved sugars over thousands of years.
In addition to the molecular configuration, the archaeological history gained the most vital boundary. The tractor was part of a campus, an underground refuge dedicated to a legendary founder, and perhaps Issa de Helico, linked to the Greek city of Sebares. After destroying, the population was founded by Poseidonia, which was called the Romans from Beesome.
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