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Reading Between the Lines


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A thin beam of X-rays scans the writings of the legendary Greek scientist and mathematician Archimedes, a hidden text that may be the most important ancient scientific document discovered since the Renaissance. As faint lines emerge on a large computer monitor at Stanford's Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, I can just barely make out the ghostly image of the Greek letter lambda.

 

As a Webcast producer for the Exploratorium science museum in San Francisco, I have been documenting this experimental use of one of the most sophisticated tools of modern science, to decipher a 1,000-year-old book made of goatskin. Known as the Archimedes Palimpsest, dubbed Archie for short, it looks terribly fragile. The edges of most of the book's 174 pages are burned, and tears, holes and spots of purple mold dot their surface. The parchment is smaller than I thought it would be, not much larger than a hardback novel...

 

Smithsonian Magazine

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Almost as much as what these ancient writings reveal, what fascinates me is how they resurface after having been "missing" for numbers of years.

 

Then, sometime after World War I, the palimpsest disappeared again, removed from the library under mysterious circumstances
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It's amazing how ancient treasures re-surface. The so called 'jewels of Helen' were dug up in Germany a few years back after being hidden after World War 2. What makes this discovery more special is that you rarely come across a lost ancient text. I wonder how many other lost works will be found.

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