5 February 2025

Alison Francis

Senior science journalist

Vesuvius challenge is shown three sections of gray scroll with torn edges with visible black writing effects.Vesuvius Challenge

X -ray and AI exams are inside the old scroll can be detected

The burning was “passed” badly from the Romanian town of Herculaneum, which provides the first appearance inside for 2000 years.

The document, which looks like a mass of charcoal, was searched by the volcanic explosion of the Vesovius Mountain in 79ad, which is very fragile so that it cannot be opened physically.

But now scientists have used a mixture of x -ray and artificial intelligence to almost cancel its nullification, and they reveal rows and columns of the text.

More work is needed to make passing completely read to break its contents, but the team behind the project says the results are very promising.

Bodleian Library was passed from the old city of Herculaneum, which sits in a plastic tray on an office in the Bodleian Library. Its length is about 15 cm and its width is about 3 cm. It is dark brown and looks very charred, similar to a mass of charcoal.Bodlian Library

The old scroll was burned to a brittle

Stephen Parsons, the pioneer in the Vesuvius challenge project, said an international competition trying to open Hercules manuscripts.

Some messages are already clear in the old text and the team believes that it has done a philosophy.

Vesuvius challenges closely displaying a black and white image to unprecedented passing from Hercules through X -ray and AI scannings. Some Greek letters are visible on the page - but the words cannot be made fully.  Vesuvius Challenge

Some Greek letters can be seen on passing the papyrus

Hundreds of wrapped rolls were discovered in Hercules, which were buried like her neighbor Pompeii under meters of volcanic ash.

In the past, some documents, which are manufactured by a thick paper -like material called papyrus, were open but collapsed in cutting.

The Bodlian Library at the University of Oxford has many rolls. It is believed that it is not readable, as they left without touching it for decades.

“We have never been convinced of any of the techniques that were safe enough or effective enough to get any information from the manuscripts,” explained Nicole Gillroi, head of the preservation of books.

But the promise to solve high technology prompted the team to get one of the precious manuscripts of storage.

Tony Jolliffe/BBC Arial Image of Diamond Light Source in Oxfordshire. The building is a large silver -shaped ring that has a speedy particles inside. The countryside surrounding the machine can be seen. Tony Golf/BBC

The X -ray diamond light source is used to see inside the pass

It was placed in a specially made and transferred to the source of diamonds in Oxfordshire.

Inside this huge machine, called Synchrotron, electrons are almost speeding the speed of light to produce a strong X -ray beam that can investigate the scroll without damaging it.

“You can see things on a few thousand millimeters,” said Adrian Mankoso, Director of Physical Sciences at Diamond.

The survey is used to create a 3D reconstruction, then the layers inside the scroll – which contain about 10 meters of papyrus.

“We have to know the layer that differs from the next layer so that we can cancel it digitally,” said Dr. Mankoso.

Then artificial intelligence is used to detect ink. It is easier to say than do it – both papyrus and ink are made of carbon and almost unable to distinguish from each other.

So artificial intelligence is looking for the smallest signals that may be ink there, then this ink is drawn digitally, which illuminates the letters.

Bodlian Library was passed from the ancient city of Hercules, sitting on a white circular tray at the Bodlian Library. Its length is about 15 cm and its width is about 3 cm. It is dark brown and looks very charred, similar to a mass of charcoal. A woman with purple gloves she deals with. Bodlian Library

Dealing with charred pass is a difficult task – it is very fragile

“We can say that the entire pass is full of text,” said Stephen Parsons.

“Now we can work to make it appear more clearly. We will move from a few words to really large clips.”

Last year, the Vesuvius Challenge team managed to read about 5 % of the other Hercules passes.

Its topic was the Greek philosophy of Epicurean, which knows that loyalty could be found through the fun of daily things.

Bodleian's passing on the same topic – but the Vesuvius team calls for more human ingenuity and computing to see if this is the case.

For Nicole Gillroy, the work provides a link to the past.

She said: “I love this relationship with everyone who gathered them, who wrote them, who rolled those wraps and put them on the shelves. There is a real human side to think it is really precious.”

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