Some special glues use sap from trees.
it is made of trees and the trees are cut into pieces and then glued together so it sticks and then they wet the glue and then they sand it.
Homemade glue is commonly made from the gum of Acacia plants such as-Acacia arabica, Acacia juliflora, Acacia cupressoides, Acacia auriculiformis etc.
Envelopes have a strange taste when you lick the seal because there is a layer of glue there. The glue is made from gum arabic. Gum arabic is produced with the sap of acacia trees.
There is no glue made from peanuts.
White glue is made of polyvinyl acetate
Pine trees and okra for sure, and possibly more.
Slice the side of the tree then wait for about 24 hours to get sap and use it to make glue.
Gorilla Glue was made in 1972.
The glue in pine trees is sap. This sap has been made into glue by native Indians for centuries. To make pine sap glue as the Indians and pioneers did, melt the pine sap in a small can or tin over a campfire. Leave room in the tin for some crushed charcoal (make this from the remains of yesterdays campfire) Mix crushed charcoal into about 3 times as much hot pine sap and you now have glue that will stick many things.) Even though the remains will harden, each time you melt them you will have usable glue again. -Good camping.
Some pine trees do that.
No, glue never was made out of horse pee.
There were no doubt MANY 'famous inventors' who made 'glue' -Specify WHICH glue, then we can give a definitive answer.