I wonder how many things from the past we will find. Today we think our manmade or complex creations will be superior to anything the ancients have come up with by observing and utilising what nature provided.

Anglo-Saxon potion could make MRSA thing of past
As antibiotics falter in the battle against superbugs, doctors may have one last hope in the fight to save modern medicine: garlic, organic Glastonbury wine and lashings of ox bile.
A 1,200-year-old Anglo-Saxon text, Bald’s Leechbook, has provided an “astonishingly” effective remedy for killing MRSA, offering hope that it could one day become a viable treatment — and causing scientists to wonder what other treasures might be hidden in the medical knowledge of the past.
The discovery emerged from a historical battle re-enactment. Freya Harrison, a microbiologist at the University of Nottingham, got to know her medievalist colleagues through a desire to add verisimilitude to weekend Viking warfare. They tested a 9th-century remedy for a stye thought likely to be caused by the staphylococcus bacterium.
“We thought that Bald’s eyesalve might show a small amount of antibiotic activity, because each of the ingredients has been shown by other researchers to have some effect on bacteria in the lab,” Dr Harrison said.
“Copper and bile salts can kill bacteria, and the garlic family of plants make chemicals that interfere with the bacteria’s ability to damage infected tissues. But we were absolutely blown away by just how effective the combination of ingredients was.”
Amazed by the obliteration of MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) in lab tests, they sent the potion to colleagues in the US to test on mice. Kendra Rumbaugh, of Texas Tech University, said: “This ‘ancient remedy’ performed as good if not better than the conventional antibiotics we used.”
Dr Harrison hopes that further tests will help produce a compound that could be tested on humans.
The research will be presented tomorrow at the annual conference of the Society for General Microbiology in Birmingham, although Christina Lee, of Nottingham’s Institute for Medieval Research, said: “We didn’t want to bring it out on April 1st because people would have thought it was a joke.”
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/health/ne ... 397441.ece