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[personal profile] scottobear
Jawa with lightsaber, antlers and blue sneakers. Or is it a spooky neighbor, bearing an irradiated spinach roll? Frankie, the creepy neighbor came by last night at midnight, purportedly to give me a spinach roll from work (he keeps mentioning that he'll bring me a pizza or something from work for letting him use the phone... I thank him, and he asks to use the phone again... calling a friend of his up to come take him somewhere. After he'd left, I notice that the spinach roll is still warm. I unwrap it, and there's a bite out of the end. Ugh. He could have at least cut that portion off. Between that, and the generally creepy vibe the guy throws off, I opted not to eat it, even if it's a waste of food. Color me paranoid, but I don't think I want to consume any gifts from him.

A unique library of medieval manuscripts, devastated by fire during World War II and considered lost by scholars, could be restored using technology developed to study the surface of planets.

The medieval library at Chartres, France, was destroyed in an allied bombing raid on the evening of 26 May, 1944.

The collection, then housed in an annexe of Chartres town hall, comprised around 2,000 medieval books and parchments, many of which dated to the 12th Century.

The library was considered a national treasure and a good proportion of the works were unpublished.

After the fire was quelled, volunteers moved in to save what they could from the smouldering ruins. Although thousands of texts were recovered, the fierce inferno carbonised the majority, rendering them unreadable.

But digital technology called multispectral imaging may now be able to reveal text on even the most badly burned manuscripts, allowing scholars to study them again.

Non-invasive technique

A key member of the team using multispectral imaging to decipher burned scrolls from the Roman town of Herculaneum, which was buried by the eruption of the volcano Vesuvius in AD 79, says the technique could be ideal for reading the damaged Chartres manuscripts.

"The beauty of [multispectral imaging] is that it is not invasive," Professor Richard Janko of the University of Michigan, US, told BBC News Online.

"It's worth a trial [on the Chartres texts]. It could do a lot for the study of medieval literature," he added.

"The library at Chartres was possibly the greatest medieval library," said associate professor Constant Mews, an expert in medieval literature at Monash University in Victoria, Australia.

Multispectral imaging is widely used on satellites that produce detailed images of the Earth. But it is now gaining ground as a technique in archaeological restoration.

Researchers take several images of a manuscript with a special multispectral camera.

The photos are then passed through different filters to produce a set of images viewed at different wavelengths of light.

These wavelengths range from colours in the visible spectrum to infrared and ultraviolet light - which are invisible to the naked eye.

This image set is then processed to show up subtle features on the page, revealing text previously concealed from human vision.

Like the manuscripts from Chartres, the Herculaneum scrolls were carbonised by intense heat.

But manuscripts from Chartres were also dowsed in water from fire hoses, which has had a particularly damaging effect on the rolled-up parchments.

"The action of water after the fire vitrified the parchments, making them like glass. They are also very breakable," said Dominique Poirel, a research engineer at the Institut de Recherche et d'Histoire des Textes in Paris, France.

It is not known whether this will pose any obstacle to reading the parchments with multispectral imaging.

Fateful raid

There are two alternative accounts of the events that led to the destruction of the library.

Some contemporary newspaper reports say a British plane, hit by German fire, dropped its bombs on the library as it fell from the sky.

But another version of the story maintains that a German pilot released his bombs over Chartres by accident, prompting other pilots in his formation to do the same. One of these bombs hit the library, causing the fire.

At the beginning of hostilities in 1939, the precious manuscripts were moved to Chateau de Villebon, a country house about 20 kilometres outside Chartres and deemed a safe location.

But in 1940, an official in the town's new German administration ordered the texts be returned to the library premises.

Ironically, this was a propaganda move designed to reassure the town's inhabitants that they had nothing to fear from Nazi occupation.

The centrepiece of the collection was the Heptateuchon, a treatise on the arts by the 12th Century philosopher Thierry de Chartres.

Mr Poirel said that while some pages of the Heptateuchon were still intact, much of it had been damaged by fire.

Mr Poirel said he had not yet looked into the possibility of using multispectral imaging to decipher texts from the medieval library but added: "If there were some reason to [request funding] we would."

Date: 2003-07-07 08:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sophiegoodchild.livejournal.com
AARRGGHH!!! Frankie is the creepiest of creepies! I would be so miffed if that happened to me. You're the sweetest of sweeties to take it so well. I'm glad you didn't eat it! Blech!

Re:

Date: 2003-07-07 09:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
oh, he's not *the creepiest* but he's surely the *the creepiest nearby*.

thank you for your kind words!

Date: 2003-07-07 09:53 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hey Scotto it’s the GrayPumpkin.

Taking a bite out of the spinach roll he gave is some weird behavior. I wouldn’t have eaten it either. Not cause I would think he was up to something, nefarious, but just cause it’s creepy.

Man that multispectral imaging is cool; it’s amazing what technology can do. I hope this works. If only we still had all those burned books from the Library at Alexandria.

Date: 2003-07-07 10:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
Hey, Gray!

Yeah, I suspect he bit into it, decided he didn't want it, and brought it over as a pseudo-bribe in order to use my phone at a late hour.

I wonder if we uncovered Alexandrian scrolls, how much would contain a bunch of pesky pornography, and literary fiction.

Date: 2003-07-07 03:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] peradouro.livejournal.com
man he is creepy :p

Re:

Date: 2003-07-07 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
well, I exaggerate. he has neither antlers or glowing eyes.
From: [identity profile] peradouro.livejournal.com
So that's a glowing spinach roll??!! LMAO oh my! You know I used to know someone named frankie who was kinda creepy. Is your frankie kinda tall and lean with lanky hair? I think he had blue eyes and did construction work.
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
well, this one is short, balding and skinny ish.. bu still a creepazoid. hazel eyes if I recall

Why is there...

Date: 2003-07-08 07:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redamelia.livejournal.com
ALWAYS a Frankie living next door? Mine was named Bambie..I kid you not.

Re: Why is there...

Date: 2003-07-08 08:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
As long as we can keep them apart, and stop them from breeding.

Re: Why is there...

Date: 2003-07-08 09:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redamelia.livejournal.com
LOL...she had bred....two dirty and underclothed babies....maybe the missing father was Frankie.

I also recently had a neighbor who tried to bribe me with foodstamp money to buy him some beer. I had to hide my beer in a backpack whenever I came home.

Re: Why is there...

Date: 2003-07-08 12:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottobear.livejournal.com
oh, man... them's some pesky neighbors! Foodstamp money... I thoughtr that these days it's on a "credit card"?

Re: Why is there...

Date: 2003-07-08 12:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redamelia.livejournal.com
It is I think..he used to wave it in front of me like a wad of 100 dollar bills. He always wanted me to go to Kroger with him and make these underhanded transactions. he he I felt so dirty.

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