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Digital pixs of Dead Sea Scrolls headed to Internet via NASA
Science
Digital pixs of Dead Sea Scrolls headed to Internet via NASA | Digital pixs of Dead Sea Scrolls headed to Internet via NASA |
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| by William Atkins | |
| Monday, 01 September 2008 | |
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Page 1 of 2 On August 27, 2008, the Israeli internet news agency YNET announced that the project to digitize the Scrolls had begun by the Israeli Antiquities Authority (IAA) under the advisement of experts at the King’s College London and with sophisticated imaging equipment provided by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The Dead Sea Scrolls, the oldest known version of the Hebrew Bible, are believed to have been compiled about two thousand years ago. Written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, they contain all of the books of the Old Testament, along with other religious materials written before and after the time of Jesus. The Scrolls are written on parchment or papyrus. High-technology digital cameras will use infrared imagery to photograph all of the Dead Sea Scroll. Many of the Scrolls will also be imaged with a special multi-spectral imaging camera. The sophisticated technique will allow many sections of the 2,000-year-old scrolls to be identified after over sixty years of being unable to be deciphered by earlier, less-sophisticated technologies. In 1947, a young Bedouin shepherd by the name of Mohammed Ahmed el-Hamed (nicknamed edh-Dhib, translated as "the wolf") is generally accepted to have been the first person to discover them when he found some of them buried in a Wadi Qumran cave near the ruins of an ancient settlement of Khirbet Oumran in the West Bank. Over the next 32 years, the current collection of Scrolls was uncovered in eleven caves about one mile (1.6 kilometer) inland from the northwest shore of the Dead Sea. Additional information on the preservation project continues on page two. |
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