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X-ray technique 'reads' burnt Vesuvius scroll

43 pointsby kevcampbover 10 years ago

6 comments

laichzeit0over 10 years ago
There are so many great Classical works that are lost to us [1]. I would really love if they turn out to be some of them, even if just fragments thereof. Polybius&#x27; Histories (particularly after the battle of Cannae), Livy&#x27;s Ab Urbe Condita, Menander&#x27;s plays, maybe Suetonius&#x27; Lives of Famous Whores for interest sake ;)<p>[1] <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_work#Classical_world" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Lost_work#Classical_world</a>
VLMover 10 years ago
This aspect strikes me as a perfect crowd sourcing &quot;science at home&quot; project or a craptcha task:<p>&quot;The work was time-consuming and involved a lot of guesswork, particularly because the layers of paper were not just rolled, but squashed and mangled by their encounter with Vesuvius&quot;<p>I&#x27;d participate, in my infinite spare time. My Latin isn&#x27;t so good, but this would probably help with that, also.
cydonian_monkover 10 years ago
I was reading up on this earlier today and it looks like an absolutely fascinating project.<p>Rather labor intensive to rebuild the document though, and not something that seems easily automated. So many of the scrolls appear to have kinks or major warpage in them, and I can only imagine many of the layers have fused together. I guess if you could find a common thread that goes across the entire length of a layer (be that an actual physical papyrus &quot;thread&quot; or some marker like an inked line) you could use that as a calibration point. From there it would be easier to map out and extract the letters on each layer (though still not easy). Does anyone who&#x27;s read the main article in Nature (1) have any more details?<p>1: <a href="http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2015/150120/ncomms6895/full/ncomms6895.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nature.com&#x2F;ncomms&#x2F;2015&#x2F;150120&#x2F;ncomms6895&#x2F;full&#x2F;nco...</a>
greglindahlover 10 years ago
Interesting juxtaposition with the prior article about destroying Egyptian funeral masks in order to read them. In this case preserving the scrolls will eventually allow a much better result.
raverbashingover 10 years ago
I though this would be a simple &quot;put the thing under the X-ray and read it&quot; and not like reading a burned &quot;toilet paper roll&quot;<p>Amazing
mjklinover 10 years ago
Years ago I heard they were using this technique on the burned papyrus library from Oxyrynchus. Wonder how they&#x27;re coming with that.