4.8 Article

Revealing metallic ink in Herculaneum papyri

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1519958113

Keywords

paleography; papyrology; Herculaneum papyri; ruled lines; metallic ink

Funding

  1. European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
  2. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology

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Writing on paper is essential to civilization, as Pliny the Elder remarks in his Natural History, when he describes the various types of papyri, the method of manufacturing them, and all that concerns writing materials in the mid-first century AD. For this reason, a rigorous scientific study of writing is of fundamental importance for the historical understanding of ancient societies. We show that metallic ink was used several centuries earlier than previously thought. In particular, we found strong evidence that lead was intentionally used in the ink of Herculaneum papyri and discuss the possible existence of ruled lines traced on the papyrus texture. In addition, the metallic concentrations found in these fragments deliver important information in view of optimizing future computed tomography (CT) experiments on still-unrolled Herculaneum scrolls to improve the readability of texts in the only surviving ancient Greco-Roman library.

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