Dead Sea scrolls going digital on Internet

JERUSALEM, (Reuters) – Scholars and anyone with an  Internet connection will be able to take a new look into the  Biblical past through an online archive of high-resolution  images of the 2,000-year-old Dead Sea Scrolls.

Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), the custodian of the  scrolls that shed light on the life of Jews and early Christians  at the time of Jesus, said on Tuesday it was collaborating with  Google’s research and development centre in Israel to upload  digitised images of the entire collection.

Advanced imaging technology will be installed in the IAA’s  laboratories early next year and high-resolution images of each  of the scrolls’ 30,000 fragments will be freely accessible on  the Internet. The IAA conducted a pilot imaging project in 2008.

“The images will be equal in quality to the actual physical  viewing of the scrolls, thus eliminating the need for  re-exposure of the Scrolls and allowing their preservation for  future generations,” the Authority said in a statement.

It said that the new technology would help to expose writing  that has faded over the centuries and promote further research  into one of the most important archaeological finds of the 20th  century.

The scrolls, most of them on parchment, are the oldest  copies of the Hebrew Bible and include secular text dating from  the third century BC to the first century AD.

For many years after Bedouin shepherds first came upon the  scrolls in caves near the Dead Sea in 1947, only a small number  of scholars were allowed to view the fragments.

But access has since been widened and they were published in  their entirety nine years ago.
A few large pieces of scroll are on permanent display at the  Israel Museum in Jerusalem.