Current:Home > ContactWords on mysterious scroll buried by Mount Vesuvius eruption deciphered for first time after 2,000 years -BrightFutureFinance
Words on mysterious scroll buried by Mount Vesuvius eruption deciphered for first time after 2,000 years
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:54:22
Three researchers this week won a $700,000 prize for using artificial intelligence to read a 2,000-year-old scroll that was scorched in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. One expert said the breakthrough could "rewrite the history" of the ancient world.
The Herculaneum papyri consist of about 800 rolled-up Greek scrolls that were carbonized during the 79 CE volcanic eruption that buried the ancient Roman town of Pompeii, according to the organizers of the "Vesuvius Challenge."
Resembling logs of hardened ash, the scrolls, which are kept at Institut de France in Paris and the National Library of Naples, have been extensively damaged and even crumbled when attempts have been made to roll them open.
As an alternative, the Vesuvius Challenge carried out high-resolution CT scans of four scrolls and offered $1 million spread out among multiple prizes to spur research on them.
The trio who won the grand prize of $700,000 was composed of Youssef Nader, a PhD student in Berlin, Luke Farritor, a student and SpaceX intern from Nebraska, and Julian Schilliger, a Swiss robotics student.
Ten months ago, we launched the Vesuvius Challenge to solve the ancient problem of the Herculaneum Papyri, a library of scrolls that were flash-fried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
— Nat Friedman (@natfriedman) February 5, 2024
Today we are overjoyed to announce that our crazy project has succeeded. After 2000… pic.twitter.com/fihs9ADb48
The group used AI to help distinguish ink from papyrus and work out the faint and almost unreadable Greek lettering through pattern recognition.
"Some of these texts could completely rewrite the history of key periods of the ancient world," Robert Fowler, a classicist and the chair of the Herculaneum Society, told Bloomberg Businessweek magazine.
The challenge required researchers to decipher four passages of at least 140 characters, with at least 85 percent of characters recoverable.
Last year Farritor decoded the first word from one of the scrolls, which turned out to be the Greek word for "purple." That earned first place in the First Letters Prize. A few weeks later, Nader deciphered a few columns of text, winning second place.
As for Schilliger, he won three prizes for his work on a tool called Volume Cartographer, which "enabled the 3D-mapping of the papyrus areas you see before you," organizers said.
Jointly, their efforts have now decrypted about five percent of the scroll, according to the organizers.
The scroll's author "throws shade"
The scroll's author was "probably Epicurean philosopher Philodemus," writing "about music, food, and how to enjoy life's pleasures," wrote contest organizer Nat Friedman on social media.
The scrolls were found in a villa thought to be previously owned by Julius Caesar's patrician father-in-law, whose mostly unexcavated property held a library that could contain thousands more manuscripts.
The contest was the brainchild of Brent Seales, a computer scientist at the University of Kentucky, and Friedman, the founder of Github, a software and coding platform that was bought by Microsoft. As "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker previously reported, Seales made his name digitally restoring damaged medieval manuscripts with software he'd designed.
The recovery of never-seen ancient texts would be a huge breakthrough: according to data from the University of California, Irvine, only an estimated 3 to 5 percent of ancient Greek texts have survived.
"This is the start of a revolution in Herculaneum papyrology and in Greek philosophy in general. It is the only library to come to us from ancient Roman times," Federica Nicolardi of the University of Naples Federico II told The Guardian newspaper.
In the closing section, the author of the scroll "throws shade at unnamed ideological adversaries -- perhaps the stoics? -- who 'have nothing to say about pleasure, either in general or in particular,'" Friedman said.
The next phase of the competition will attempt to leverage the research to unlock 90% of the scroll, he added.
"In 2024 our goal is to go from 5% of one scroll, to 90% of all four scrolls we have scanned, and to lay the foundation to read all 800 scrolls," organizers wrote.
- In:
- Pompeii
- Archaeologist
veryGood! (61587)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Rep. Patrick McHenry, former temporary House speaker, to retire from Congress
- Switchblade completes first test flight in Washington. Why it's not just any flying car.
- 'Little House on the Prairie' star Melissa Gilbert on why she ditched Botox, embraced aging
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Atmospheric river brings heavy rain, flooding and warm winter temperatures to the Pacific Northwest
- St. Louis prosecutor who replaced progressive says he’s ‘enforcing the laws’ in first 6 months
- Horoscopes Today, December 5, 2023
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Jacky Oh's Partner DC Young Fly Shares Their Kids' Moving Message 6 Months After Her Death
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Biden calls reports of Hamas raping Israeli hostages ‘appalling,’ says world can’t look away
- Residents in northern Mexico protest over delays in cleaning up a mine spill
- Argentina’s President-elect Milei replies to Musk’s interest: ‘We need to talk, Elon’
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Man charged with murder in Philadelphia store stabbing that killed security guard, wounded another
- Scientists say November is 6th straight month to set heat record; 2023 a cinch as hottest year
- Atmospheric river brings heavy rain, flooding and warm winter temperatures to the Pacific Northwest
Recommendation
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Coast Guard suspends search for missing fisherman off coast of Louisiana, officials say
State officials review mistaken payments sent by Kentucky tornado relief fund
Jonathan Majors' ex Grace Jabbari testifies on actor's 'violent temper': 'I had to be perfect'
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
CVS is switching up how it pays for prescriptions. Will it save you money?
Jets drop Tim Boyle, add Brett Rypien in latest QB shuffle
Copa América 2024 draw is Thursday, here's how it works and how to watch