艺术
美容与健康
工艺
文化与历史
娱乐
环境
食品与饮料
绿色未来
逆向工程
科学
体育
技术
可穿戴设备
Making Egyptian Kohl Eye Cosmetic — Ancient Chemistry That Fought Infection
危险内容
Charlie

创建者

Charlie

31. 五月 2026DE
10
0
0
0
0

Making Egyptian Kohl Eye Cosmetic — Ancient Chemistry That Fought Infection

Kohl (Arabic: كحل, kuḥl — the origin of the word 'alcohol') is the world's oldest cosmetic, used continuously for over 5,000 years across Egypt, Mesopotamia, the Indian subcontinent, and the Arab world. Egyptian tomb paintings from 3100 BCE show both men and women wearing dramatic black eye liner — not for vanity alone, but as medical protection.

The primary ingredient in ancient Egyptian kohl was galena (lead sulfide, PbS), ground to a fine powder and mixed with animal fat or oil to create a paste. Modern analysis of kohl samples from Egyptian tombs (now in the Louvre) revealed that the Egyptians also deliberately synthesised two rare lead compounds not found in nature: laurionite (PbOHCl) and phosgenite (Pb₂Cl₂CO₃). These compounds are produced by a wet-chemistry process involving lead oxide, salt, water, and natron — a process that takes 30-40 days of patient grinding and mixing.

In 2010, French researchers at the CNRS discovered why: these synthetic lead chloride compounds stimulate the production of nitric oxide (NO) in human skin cells. Nitric oxide is a key signalling molecule in the immune system — it activates macrophages (white blood cells) that fight bacterial infections. In the hot, fly-plagued environment of ancient Egypt, eye infections were endemic. The kohl was not just cosmetic — it was a deliberately manufactured antimicrobial treatment, 5,000 years before germ theory.

中级
30-40 days (synthesis) + 2 hours (preparation)

危险内容

此蓝图包含危险操作。请登录并在账户设置中启用危险内容,以查看分步说明。

CC0 公共领域

此蓝图以 CC0 协议发布。你可以自由复制、修改、分发和使用此作品,无需征得许可。

通过购买蓝图中的产品支持创客,他们将获得 创客佣金 (由供应商设定),或创建此蓝图的新版本并将其作为连接包含在你自己的蓝图中以分享收入。

讨论

(0)

登录 加入讨论

加载评论中...