Thursday 7 September 2017

Mystery of peculiar purple spots on 800 year old scrolls solved


More than 800 years ago, a teenaged soldier named Laurentius Loricatus accidentally killed a man. He spent the next three decades repenting alone in an Italian cave, self-flagellating.

Mystery of peculiar purple spots on 800 year old scrolls solved
Purple spot damaging the scroll [Credit: G. Vendittozzi]
But there are gaps in Loricatus's story, which was penned in the year 1244, after his death, on a five-metre-long goat skin parchment setting out the case for his canonisation—which failed.

Infuriating purple "spots" blot the ancient scroll and many others. On Thursday, scientists reported they had finally identified the cause of the spots.

Mystery of peculiar purple spots on 800 year old scrolls solved
The five-metre long parchment, A.A. Arm. I-XVIII 3328, from the Vatican Secret Archives. It belongs to the oldest
collection of the Archives, called Archivum Arcis, which was kept in Castel S. Angelo (downtown Rome) 
until the end of the 18th Century [Credit: G. Vendittozzi]
In a study published in the journal Scientific Reports, they fingered both Halobacteria, a type of bacteria found in high-salt environments like oceans, and Gammaproteobacteria—a group of microbes in the same class as E.coli and salmonella.

As patchy as it is, the tale is known thanks to the scroll's careful preservation. It has been kept in controlled temperature and humidity conditions at the Vatican Secret Archives since the 18th century.

Mystery of peculiar purple spots on 800 year old scrolls solved
Detachment of the superficial layer of the damaged areas and loss of readability [Credit: G. Vendittozzi]
The scientists said they hoped the breakthrough would boost document preservation and perhaps aid restoration of those already damaged.

Further study should identify the exact sequence of spot-causing microbes, they added.

Source: AFP [September 07, 2017]

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