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Old 07-01-2004, 10:37 PM
Shell
 
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Default Time-tested glue recipe: Mix orchid roots and water


"Reka" wrote in message
...
(Originally from The Washington Post)

Here's a handy little recipe for glue, although you have to have an orchid
or two available:

Slice up the roots, dry the cross sections in the sun for three days or

so.
Pound the bejabbers out of them, making a powder. Add water, heat and

stir.

Now you've got glue delicate enough to stick feathers to wood without
damaging them, and strong enough to last hundreds of years.

How do we know it will last hundreds of years? It already has, The
Washington Post reports.

The Aztecs did it.

Anthropologist Frances Berdan of California State University, San

Bernardino
is an expert in Aztec glues (probably not an overarching demand for that
calling)


That calling ranks right up there with the people who rehydrate coprolites
(fossilized poo don't you know) just to see what the creature who produced
it ate and the people who try to put back together flakes of rock produced
in tool making to find ut what the rock the tool was made from looked like.


and has cooked up samples to come up with the finding.

Berdan worked from texts written by 16th-century conquistadors.

"There are a number of documents that describe the glue, complete with
drawings of the plants," Berdan told The Post. "They appeared to be

orchids,
except there were so many kinds, I wasn't sure. But orchid dealers
identified them immediately."

Berdan and colleagues rounded up some orchids and cooked up the glue
according to the recipes. They wound up with a clear adhesive like the one
that Aztec artists used to stick the feathers to wood or hide, creating
mosaics that were used in ceremonies or worn as decorations or displayed

in
the home, The Post said.

Doesn't say how long it takes for the glue to dry, but with a three-day
preparation time, it's not likely to sap much market share away from
Elmer's.



Neat story I was an Anthropology/Archaeology major for awhile. Untill I
had to get serious and find a job Reality strikes again

Shell




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