Sep 14, 2015 by Rossella Lorenzi
Sherbiny working on a fragment of the leather roll in Cairo Museum.
Wael Sherbiny
PeeringInsideanAncientPapyrus:Photos
Using a powerful X-ray procedure, researchers led by Vito Mocella, a physicist from the National Research Council's Institute for Microelectronics and Microsystems (CNR-IMM) in Naples, have for the first time been able to read letters hidden inside two carbonized papyri without unrolling them. Until now it has appeared impossible to distinguish ink from papyrus inside a scroll using conventional X-ray techniques. Read the full story here.
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