Subject: UV scanning of parchment
I am posting this on behalf of a group of students at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute. We are students at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) and we are currently working on our Major Qualifying Project (MQP), our senior year project. The topic of research is ultraviolet scanning of parchments. Degraded and moldy parchments are often difficult to read, but UV illumination usually improves readability of them. The goal of this project is to implement a manuscript scanning system based on UV illumination. By scanning a manuscript with such an UV scanner, a readable digitized copy will be produced, as an alternative to repeated handing of the original document and exposure of it to ultraviolet light. We were wondering if anyone has any information or insight as to why it is possible to see writing underneath the mold by shining a UV source over it. Without using UV light, you can only observe the mold--you cannot look through the mold and see the text. Furthermore, even with the UV light reaching the text underneath the mold, causing the tannin in the iron gall ink to fluoresce, we are puzzled as to why visible light could penetrate through the mold. Does mold/fungi have a transparent property in the presence of a UV source? If you have any information regarding this topic or anything else, please contact us. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Cindy Chung <cchung [at] wpi__edu> Billy Fratelli Tak Hoi Lam Babette Gehnrich Chief Conservator American Antiquarian Society 185 Salisbury Street Worcester, Ma 01609 508-471-2169 Fax: 508-753-3311 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:24 Distributed: Thursday, September 26, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-24-010 ***Received on Thursday, 26 September, 2002