The modern English term for amber is thought to have its linguistic roots in the Arabic Anbar, wh... Amber: an ancient treasure

Submitted by admin on Tue, 2006-09-19 11:00. ::

Throughout history, humans have mistaken amber to be the faeces of mythical beasts, a wax produced by giant ants, the fossilised spawn of huge fish or even elephant semen.

Baltic amber has its origins in thick prehistoric coniferous forests which covered a land mass in the region of modern-day Scandinavia and parts of what is now the Baltic Sea a very distant 40 million years ago. Today we admire resins which oozed from the trunks of these massive prehistoric trees as amber.

Geologists believe an ancient river, which has been termed the Eridan, transported dead tree trunks caked in sticky resin to a sea which was a smaller precursor of the modern Baltic, which itself was formed only 10 000 years ago.

Rich deposits of fossilised tree resin or succinite, better known as Baltic amber, accumulated in the sea along what is now the Baltic coast between the Polish village of Chlapowo and the Sambian peninsula of the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad.

Other large amber caches around the globe are found in Canada, Columbia, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Lebanon, Myanmar, Siberia, Borneo, Australia and Japan.

With the first traces of amber crafting in Gdansk dating from the 10th Century, it is little wonder the city has become the world capital for amber work. It is home to hundreds of workshops producing jewellery as well as the annual Amberif amber fair, the largest event of its kind in the world.

To honour the epic history of amber in the region, Gdansk recently opened the Museum of Amber encapsulating 40 million years of history on five floors of a 14th century red brick tower in the heart of the city's picturesque old town.

A tiny white lizard frozen in a golden globule of amber roughly two centimetres in length and one centimetre in width is an unique time capsule of life from 40 million years ago.

Indeed, the museum is home to an impressive collection of so-called amber inclusions of prehistoric vegetation and insect life and is more than likely the only place on earth where visitors can see two flies caught "inflagrante" aeons ago in a blob of resin, now turned into amber.

Some resemble swirling mixtures of transparent golden honey and translucent rich, creamy butter that look good enough to eat. Others look like dark blobs of thick blackish-brown molasses with haunting ghost-like misty white smudges. Yet other specimens are the colour of champagne or pale beer which sparkle with tiny air-bubbles.

Information on the alleged healing qualities of amber is also available. The ancient resin is thought to ease respiratory problems when powdered and combined with alcohol and taken as a tonic.

Gdansk's Amber Museum is also home to the world's second largest piece of amber weighing in at 5.9kg. The biggest single piece of amber ever found weighs some 9.75kg and is on display at Berlin's Humboldt University Museum of Natural History.

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