29/01/2016

“Proteins in Art, Archaeology, and Paleontology: from detection to identification” by Dallongeville et al (2016)

Dallongeville, Sophie; Garnier, Nicolas; Rolando, Christian; Tokarski, Caroline, “Proteins in Art, Archaeology, and Paleontology: from detection to identification”, Chemical Reviews 116(1) (2016) pp. 2–79.
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00037 (ACS Publications, restricted access)

22/01/2016

“Quantifying degradation of collagen in ancient manuscripts: the case of the Dead Sea Temple Scroll” by Schütz et al (2013)

Schütz, R.; Bertinetti, L.; Rabin, I.; Fratzl, P.; Masic, A., “Quantifying degradation of collagen in ancient manuscripts: the case of the Dead Sea Temple Scroll”, Analyst 138(19) (2013) pp. 5594–5599.
DOI:10.1039/C3AN00609C (Royal Society of Chemistry, open access)

Abstract:
Since their discovery in the late 1940s, the Dead Sea Scrolls, some 900 ancient Jewish texts, have never stopped attracting the attention of scholars and the broad public alike, because they were created towards the end of the Second Temple period and the “time of Christ”. Most of the work on them has been dedicated to the information contained in the scrolls' text, leaving physical aspects of the writing materials unexamined. They are, however, crucial for both historical insight and preservation of the scrolls. Although scientific analysis requires handling, it is essential to establish the state of degradation of these valued documents. Polarized Raman Spectroscopy (PRS) is a powerful tool for obtaining information on both the composition and the level of disorder of molecular units. In this study, we developed a non-invasive and non-destructive methodology that allows a quantification of the disorder (that can be related to the degradation) of protein molecular units in collagen fibers. Not restricted to collagen, this method can be applied also to other protein-based fibrous materials such as ancient silk, wool or hair. We used PRS to quantify the degradation of the collagen fibers in a number of fragments of the Temple Scroll (11Q19a). We found that collagen fibers degrade heterogeneously, with the ones on the surface more degraded than those in the core.

16/01/2016

"Parchment production in the first millennium BC at Seglamen, Northern Ethiopia" by Phillipson (2013)

Phillipson, Laurel; "Parchment production in the first millennium BC at Seglamen, Northern Ethiopia", African Archaeological Review 30(3) (2013) 285–303.
doi:10.1007/s10437-013-9139-y (SpringerLink, restricted access)

Abstract:
Traditional Ethiopian and European processes of parchment manufacture and their associated tools are described and compared with artefacts recovered from an important pre-Aksumite site at Seglamen, in the highlands of northern Ethiopia. Many close similarities of tools used at Seglamen in both the earlier and later phases of the pre-Aksumite, from about 800 BC, to implements used by present-day Ethiopian scribes attest to the systematic production of parchment at Seglamen and to cultural continuity over a period of almost three millennia.

03/01/2016

"Curtimento de peles" por Leite (1912)


Leite, Manuel da Silva; "Curtimento de peles", Ilustração Portuguesa 350 (1912) 601-604.
PDF (Hemeroteca Digital de Lisboa)