Author Topic: Google to digitize Dead Sea Scrolls  (Read 864 times)

Offline javajolt

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Google to digitize Dead Sea Scrolls
« on: October 20, 2010, 11:32:10 PM »

The Israel Antiquities Authority has tapped Google to digitize the famous Dead Sea scrolls, some of the oldest documents ever discovered chronicling the early years of Christianity.

CNN reports that Google will be responsible for scanning the 900 manuscripts, which are comprized of more than 30,000 fragments discovered in caves around Israel in the 1940s and 1950s.

Israeli researchers have come to worry about the ability of the scrolls to endure further photography, as exposure to light and air has a negative effect on the paper. Google will use spectral and infrared scanning techniques to make a digital copy of the scrolls, which will then be made available to the public online, according to the report.

Google was sued in 2005 for scanning 20th-century books with unexpired copyrights, and a final approval of that settlement with groups representing authors and publishers is still pending before a US judge. The issue of unexpired copyright is unlikely to be a problem with the Dead Sea scrolls, which date from between 150BC and 70AD.



Offline anykey

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Re: Google to digitize Dead Sea Scrolls
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2010, 11:12:38 AM »
...researchers have come to worry about the ability of the scrolls to endure further photography, as exposure to light and air
has a negative effect.  :D ::)

You can just picture this cannot you  ;)
Caesar adsum jam forte. Brutus aderat. Caesar sic in omnibus. Brutus sic inat.

Offline javajolt

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Re: Google to digitize Dead Sea Scrolls
« Reply #2 on: October 21, 2010, 10:07:41 PM »

Quote
You can just picture this cannot you


I understand fully, but, what I understand more and think outweighs the exposure to light and air is the need to preserve these documents for future research and future generations.

Once this digitizing is done the originals do not need to be subjected to any further degradation.

It is obvious to me that The Israel Antiquities Authority thinks this procedure is safe enough to perform otherwise it would never have authorized it in the first place.