The noninvasive digital restoration of ancient texts written in carbon black ink and hidden inside artifacts has proven elusive, even with advanced imaging techniques like x-ray-based micro-computed tomography (micro-CT). This paper identifies a crucial mistaken assumption: that micro-CT data fails to capture any information representing the presence of carbon ink. Instead, we show new experiments indicating a subtle but detectable signature from carbon ink in micro-CT. We demonstrate a new computational approach that captures, enhances, and makes visible the characteristic signature created by carbon ink in micro-CT. This previously “unseen” evidence of carbon inks, which can now successfully be made visible, is a discovery that can lead directly to the noninvasive digital recovery of the lost texts of Herculaneum.
CITATION STYLE
Parker, C. S., Parsons, S., Bandy, J., Chapman, C., Coppens, F., & Seales, W. B. (2019). From invisibility to readability: Recovering the ink of Herculaneum. PLoS ONE, 14(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215775
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.