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What amazes me is that an organic dye of this nature is still viable and recognizable after ~2000 years in the ground.

Seems to me this ought to spur on further research into the chemical.

(Given its nature and the way I've seen it prepared these days (on video, not in person) that it would have been much less stable (many organic dyes are very unstable).

This stability also suggests it must have been rather stable in use (togas dyed with it, etc.). Its stability would have made it even more valuable than otherwise.



Lots of things are stable if you bury them underground away from oxygen and sunlight.


No doubt, at some point, the chemistry of the surrounding soil will be researched in depth and we'll know.


Maybe the beeswax helped preserve it as intended.


Likely so. Even so, I'm more curious than ever to know more about its chemistry.




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