South Korean scientists recreate ancient sea silk

Researchers in South Korea have successfully reproduced a rare golden fabric known as sea silk, lost for over 2,000 years. Using threads from a farmed clam, the team not only revived the material but also explained its enduring shimmer. This breakthrough promises sustainable alternatives to traditional textiles.

A team of scientists from Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) has brought back sea silk, a luxurious fiber once reserved for ancient emperors and religious figures. Led by Professor Dong Soo Hwang from the Division of Environmental Science and Engineering and Professor Jimin Choi from the Environmental Research Institute, the researchers used byssus threads from the pen shell clam, Atrina pectinata, which is commonly farmed in Korean coastal waters for food.

Sea silk, dubbed the 'golden fiber of the sea,' originated from the Mediterranean clam Pinna nobilis more than 2,000 years ago during the Roman era. Prized for its lightweight strength and luminous gold hue, it adorned powerful individuals, including popes, and features in relics like the Holy Face of Manoppello in Italy. However, Pinna nobilis populations have dwindled due to marine pollution, leading to an EU ban on harvesting and rendering the craft nearly extinct, with production limited to a handful of artisans.

To address this, the POSTECH team turned to Atrina pectinata, whose threads mimic the original in physical and chemical properties. They developed a processing method to create fabric that matches the ancient material's appearance. Beyond recreation, the study revealed the secret to sea silk's timeless color: structural coloration from nanoscale 'photonin' protein spheres. These layered proteins reflect light like butterfly wings or soap bubbles, producing the glow without dyes, which explains its resistance to fading over centuries. The color's vibrancy increases with the proteins' orderly arrangement.

This innovation repurposes discarded byssus threads from marine farming, cutting waste and fostering eco-friendly luxury textiles with historical significance. As Professor Dong Soo Hwang stated, 'Structurally colored textiles are inherently resistant to fading. Our technology enables long-lasting color without the use of dyes or metals, opening new possibilities for sustainable fashion and advanced materials.' The findings appeared in Advanced Materials in 2025.

Relaterede artikler

Photorealistic close-up of a POMbrane crystalline membrane with 1nm pores for molecular filtration
Billede genereret af AI

Nature-inspired “POMbranes” use uniform 1-nanometer pores for ultra-selective molecular filtration

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI Faktatjekket

Researchers from India and Singapore report a crystalline membrane made from polyoxometalate clusters whose intrinsic openings are about 1 nanometer wide, enabling unusually sharp molecular separations that could help lower energy use in some industrial purification and water-reuse steps.

In Sri Lanka's Monaragala district, UK firm Mygroup and Fibershed Sri Lanka are expanding a regenerative cotton initiative to help debt-trapped farmers. The Exiled project fuses ancient Chena practices with modern techniques, yielding its first crop and launching a new clothing brand this week. Farmers report hopes for stable prices and healthier soil amid climate challenges.

Rapporteret af AI

Researchers have identified a mysterious golden orb discovered more than two miles underwater in the Gulf of Alaska as the remains of a giant deep-sea anemone. The object, collected during a 2023 NOAA expedition, puzzled experts for over two years until advanced DNA analysis provided the answer. The finding highlights the ongoing mysteries of deep-ocean life.

Researchers at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology have revealed how squid and cuttlefish survived the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction by retreating to oxygen-rich deep-sea refuges. Their analysis of newly sequenced genomes shows these cephalopods originated in the deep ocean over 100 million years ago, followed by rapid diversification into shallow waters. The findings, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, provide the first comprehensive evolutionary tree for decapodiform cephalopods.

Rapporteret af AI

Ars Technica has compiled six intriguing scientific discoveries that nearly escaped notice. The roundup covers dolphin swimming physics, Roman ship repairs, and mushroom communication via urine. Published on May 2, these stories span physics, archaeology, and biology.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis