Israel puts 5,000 images of the Dead Sea scrolls online in a partnership with Google

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Israel puts 5,000 images of the Dead Sea scrolls online in a partnership with Google
The Director-General of the Israel Antiquities Authority Shuka Dorfmann (L) and Professor Yossi Matias, managing director of Google Israel, hold a replica of a segment from the 2000-year-old manuscript of the Ten Commandments taken from the biblical book of Deuteronomy during a press conference in the Rockefeller Museum in Jerusalem, on December 18, 2012, where at they announced the publishing of the Dead Sea Scrolls online, initiated by the Israel Antiquities Authority and Google. AFP PHOTO/MENAHEM KAHANA.



JERUSALEM (AFP).- Thousands of images from the Dead Sea scrolls, which date back more than two millennia, were on Tuesday made available to the world on a joint Israel Antiquities Authority and Google website.

The new website http://www.deadseascrolls.org.il/ aims to make "the most important archaeological finds of the 20th century accessible to both scholars and the general public," an IAA statement said.

Using technology developed for NASA, the website offers high-resolution images of the ancient scrolls along with an advanced search engine.

The IAA is in the process of uploading images of the 900 biblical and other manuscripts, comprising some 30,000 fragments, which were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in the Qumran caves above the Dead Sea and photographed in their entirety with infra-red technology in the 1950s.

The parchment and papyrus scrolls contain Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic script, and include several of the earliest-known texts from the Bible, including the oldest surviving copy of the Ten Commandments.

The oldest of the documents dates to the third century BC and the most recent to about 70 AD, when Roman troops destroyed the Second Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

The artefacts are housed at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, where the larger pieces are shown at the dimly lit Shrine of the Book on a rotational basis in order to minimise damage from exposure.

When not on show, they are kept in a dark, climate-controlled storeroom in conditions similar to those in the Qumran caves, where the humidity, temperature and darkness preserved the scrolls for two millennia.

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© 1994-2012 Agence France-Presse





Jerusalem | Dead Sea Scrolls | Israel Antiquities Authority |





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