Our recent discovery of a label-less object from the third millennium in a remote area near the North Pole, has opened new vistas to understand the cultural and social behavior of people who lived about a thousand of years ago. It is perplexing to see how such objects without proper labels were used and for what purposes these objects were utilized by the people of the pre-ice age era. Needless to say it is an established convention, in which every object should have a brand, an instruction manual for use, or at least a technical drawing. Similarly, in the earlier days, labels were almost obvious on everything we have ever made, whether it is giving credit to the builders or stating a basic function. However, the piece that I have discovered through our recent excavation is very unique, and I would like to call it the Elixuum. The name elixuum comes from the combination of the words elixir and vacuum. The piece is cylindrical, with a seven millimeter opening, and they come in a small variety of six to eight inches in length. They come in a striped pattern of white and primary colors. It is made of mainly two materials; polypropylene and polystyrene, making the piece compressible yet hard enough not to be torn.
The elixuum was found in a suburban city, not far from Canada, which was the fastest freezing place that the ice-age took over. Fortunately, we found the tallest structure there, making it possible for our research team to break through easily. The part of the structure which broke through easily was an oculus opening on the roof, which led us to this area surrounded with barricades of mini-food plants of different flavors and qualities. Everything was in place and frozen, or in some cases fallen and broken, at the last dynamic point of action. All seemed to be an average day