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Guardian: Climate Change Killed off Ancient Rome’s Herbal Viagra
1 day ago Eric Worrall 121 Comments
Essay by Eric Worrall
New Hampshire professors claim the ancient Silphium herb herb died from climate change, not because greedy Romans picked every last plant.
Caesar’s favourite herb was the Viagra of ancient Rome. Until climate change killed it off
Perfume, tonic – even love potion – silphium was prized by the ancient Romans, but in its success lay the seeds of its own downfall
James Tapper Sun 15 May 2022 19.00 AEST
Of all the mysteries of ancient Rome, silphium is among the most intriguing. Romans loved the herb as much as we love chocolate. They used silphium as perfume, as medicine, as an aphrodisiac and turned it into a condiment, called laser, that they poured on to almost every dish. It was so valuable that Julius Caesar stashed more than half a tonne in his treasury.
Yet it became extinct less than a century later, by the time of Nero, and for nearly 2,000 years people have puzzled over the cause.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2022/05/15/guardian-climate-change-killed-off-roman-herbal-viagra/