In a  21st-century version of the age of discovery, teams of computer scientists,  conservationists and scholars are fanning out across the globe in a race to  digitize crumbling literary treasures.
Ancient Manuscripts In a Digital  Age
Some  manuscripts are in poor condition, like this worm-eaten, 17th-century Christian  Arabic Book of Hours from 
In the process, they're uncovering unexpected troves of new finds, including never-before-seen versions of the Christian Gospels, fragments of Greek poetry and commentaries on Aristotle.
Improved  technology is allowing researchers to scan ancient texts that were once  unreadable -- blackened in fires or by chemical erosion, painted over or simply  too fragile to unroll. Now, scholars are studying these works with X-ray  fluorescence, multispectral imaging used by NASA to photograph Mars and CAT  scans used by medical technicians.
A  Benedictine monk from 
By  taking high-resolution digital images in 14 different light wavelengths,  ranging from infrared to ultraviolet, 
So far,  researchers have digitized about 80% of the collection of 500,000 fragments,  dating from the 2nd century B.C. to the 8th century A.D. The texts include  fragments of unknown works by famous authors of antiquity, lost gospels and  early Islamic manuscripts.
Among  their latest findings: An alternate version of the Greek play Medea, later  immortalized in a version by Euripides, on a darkened piece of papyrus, dated  to the 2nd century A.D. In the newly discovered version -- written by Greek  playwright Neophron -- Medea doesn't kill her children, says Dirk Obbink,  director of 
War and  political instability in artifact-rich regions such as 
For as  long as great manuscript collections have existed, their contents have been vulnerable.  The ancient Library of Alexandria in 
While  conservationists are quick to stress that pixels and bytes can never replace  priceless physical artifacts, many see digitization as a vital tool for  increasing public access to rare items, while at the same time creating a  disaster-proof record and perhaps unearthing new information.
A  digital arms race has been heating up in recent years as companies pour  millions into large-scale digitization projects, including Microsoft's effort  to scan 80,000 books at the British Library and IBM's multimillion-dollar  project to create a virtual version of 
The  world's oldest functioning monastery, St. Catherine's in Egypt, is digitally  photographing its collection of roughly 5,000 scrolls and manuscripts,  including the Codex Sinaiticus, which dates to 330 A.D. and is thought to be  the oldest Bible in the world.
Last  month, the United Nations launched a "World Digital Library" with  materials from 30 libraries and archives around the world, including the oracle  bones, which hold the earliest Chinese writings, and an 8,000-year-old rock  painting from 
One of  the most ambitious digital preservation projects is being led, fittingly, by a  Benedictine monk. Father Columba Stewart, executive director of the 
His  mission: digitizing some 30,000 endangered manuscripts within the Eastern  Christian traditions, a canon that includes liturgical texts, Biblical  commentaries and historical accounts in half a dozen languages, including  Arabic, Coptic and Syriac, the written form of Aramaic. 
Rev.  Stewart has expanded the library's work to 23 sites, including collections in 
Among  the treasures that Rev. Stewart has digitally captured: a unique Syriac  manuscript of a 12th-century account of the Crusades, written by Syrian  Christian patriarch Michael the Great. The text, a composite of historical  accounts and fables, was last studied in the 1890s by a French scholar who made  an incomplete handwritten copy. 
Western  scholars have never studied the complete original, which was locked in a church  vault in 
In  February, Rev. Stewart traveled to Assyrian and Chaldean Christian communities  in Kurdish villages in northern 
With his  black monk's habit, trimmed gray beard and deferential manner, Rev. Stewart has  been able to make inroads into closed communities that are often suspicious of  Western scholars and fiercely protective of their texts. 
Armed  with 23-megapixel cameras and scanning cradles, he sets up imaging labs on site  in monasteries and churches, and trains local people to scan the manuscripts.
Once the  labs are set up, the projects cost roughly $20,000 a year in private donations.  A similar effort to digitize Greek New Testament manuscripts by the Texas-based  Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts costs roughly $10,000 a week  for staffing, travel and equipment.
Even as  companies such as Google try to take digital archiving mainstream, uploading  entire collections remains prohibitively expensive. Scanning books costs  roughly 10 cents a page for regular books, and up to $100 or even $1,000 per  book for rare manuscripts that require special handling and care.
Many  conservationists are pessimistic about the prospect of putting entire library  collections online within our lifetimes. The 
"In  the current economic climate, the idea of really broad, deep digitization of a  large scale is really off the table for the next couple of years," says  Joshua Greenberg, director of digital strategy and scholarship for the New York  Public Library. 
"It's a shame, because we're at the point where we really know how to do it." An even more pressing concern for some scholars is that shoddy imaging work might damage manuscripts or fail to capture key details, such as binding styles, which give clues to a manuscript's date and origin.
Some  experts say the push toward online archiving could ultimately hurt scholarly  work by creating the illusion that everything is available online, when the  digital record remains full of holes. In the age of instant information,  physical artifacts seem increasingly at risk of being rendered obsolete. For  now, curators and conservationists say capturing endangered manuscripts should  be a top priority.
"This  could be our only chance," says Daniel Wallace, executive director of the  Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts, the Texas-based center that  is attempting to digitally photograph 2.6 million pages of Greek New Testament  manuscripts scattered in monasteries and libraries around the world. 
The  group has discovered 75 New Testament manuscripts, many with unique commentaries  that were unknown to scholars. Mr. Wallace says one of the rare, 10th century  manuscripts they photographed was in a private collection and was later sold,  page by page, for $1,000 a piece. Others are simply disintegrating, eaten away  by rats and worms, or rotting.
A cascade of groundbreaking discoveries in the past decade, unleashed by new technology, has stoked the sense of urgency. Multispectral imaging -- originally developed by NASA to capture satellite images through clouds -- has proved remarkably effective on everything from ancient papyrus scrolls to medieval manuscripts that were scraped off and written over when scribes recycled parchment pages.
Using  the technique, which captures high-resolution images in different light  wavelengths, scholars can see details invisible to the naked eye: For example,  infrared light highlights ink containing carbon from crushed charcoal, while  ultraviolet light picks up ink containing iron.
Researchers  in 
Recently,  multispectral imaging has gotten much less expensive, allowing researchers to  take their equipment into the field. The next frontier, researchers say, is  using CAT scan and X-ray technology to read brittle scrolls without even  unrolling them.
This  summer, a new project to decode ancient manuscripts with multispectral imaging  will begin at the 
"It's  being called a second Renaissance," says Todd Hickey, a curator of papyri  at the 
Seeing the Works in Person
A  selection of rare manuscripts on display now around the country
The 
The  museum, which has an impressive collection of 600 illuminated medieval  manuscripts, is now showing "Prayers in Code," an exhibit of unusual  Books of Hours from the late Middle Ages. Through July 19.http://thewalters.org
The Morgan Library and Museum, 
Currently  on view: items the Morgan has acquired since 2004, including manuscripts and  letters by Robert Frost, Vincent van Gogh, Henry James, Dylan Thomas and Oscar  Wilde. Through Oct. 18. www.themorgan.org
The 
Medieval  illuminated manuscripts from 
 
Smithsonian's Freer Gallery of  Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, 
Chinese  calligraphic arts from ancient times to the Tang Dynasty are on display through  Oct. 26.www.asia.si.edu
Clicking On The Past
In the  era of instant information, libraries, museums and universities are racing to  scan rare manuscripts and artifacts in their collections and make them  available online.
Here are  some of the most significant artifacts now on view on the Web:
The British Library - www.bl.uk/
The  library began a massive digitization project in 2005 with Microsoft, and plans  to scan 25 million book pages.
Key  Works:
Leonardo da Vinci's notebooks. A collection of loose papers and notes, these 28 pages outline da Vinci's fascination with mechanics, bird flight and studies on reflections and curved mirrors. The Italian script is written in da Vinci's typical left-to-right "mirror writing." www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/ttp/leonardo/accessible/introduction.html
Key  Works:
The  contents of 
Former  slaves' narratives: audio files recorded in nine Southern states between 1932  and 1975, with 23 interviewees. Some are being made publicly available for the  first time and include transcripts. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/voices/
 
The World Digital Library - www.wdl.org/en/
Last  month, Unesco launched this new online archive of significant artifacts and  manuscripts from 30 collections around the world.
Key  Works:
Christopher  Columbus's diary from 1493, in which the explorer describes the lands he  discovered, from the Center for the Study of the History of Mexico Carso. www.wdl.org/en/item/2962
Recent Breakthroughs
Researchers  at the 
The Oxyrhynchus Papyri - http://www.papyrology.ox.ac.uk/
This  represents one of the largest collections of ancient papyri, some 500,000  pieces excavated around 1900 in 
 
Codex Sinaiticus - www.codexsinaiticus.org/en/ manuscript.aspx
Portions  of the 4th-century manuscript, thought to be the oldest complete Bible in the  world, are now scattered in several collections around the world, but the complete  text is being reassembled, in digital form, on the Web.
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