How was silk discoverd
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Answer:
it wasAccording to well-established Chinese legend, Empress Hsi Ling Shi, wife of Emperor Huang Ti (also called the Yellow Emperor), was the first person to accidentally discover silk as weavable fiber.
One day, when the empress was sipping tea under a , a cocoon fell into her cup and began to unravel. The empress became so enamored with the shimmering threads, she discovered their source, the silkworm found in the white mulberry. The empress soon developed sericulture, the cultivation of silkworms, and invented the reel and loom. Thus began the history of silk.
Whether or not the legend is accurate, it is certain that the earliest surviving references to silk history and production place it in China; and that for nearly 3 millennia, the Chinese had a global monopoly on silk production.
The myth is probably a lot better reading than the real story. Someone most likely was cleaning the cocoons out of the mulberry trees. Later on the cocoons may have broken down and threads were noticed and after a while someone with a little time on their hands started playing with them. Most likely a woman, because of the division of labor in China 2700 BCE women were in charge of spinning thread to weave into cloth.