China Daily (Hong Kong)

Expert makes new findings on history of papermakin­g

- By XINHUA in Nanjing

A Chinese archaeolog­ist has announced new findings about an ancient scrap of paper, likely the earliest on record, dating back to 250 years before Cai Lun revolution­ized papermakin­g technology in China.

The piece, about five centimeter­s long and two centimeter­s wide, was unearthed three decades ago in Fangmatan, an archaeolog­ical site in Gansu province, but it didn’t garner attention until 2012 when Li Xiaocen, an archaeolog­ist at Nanjing University of Informatio­n Science and Technology, found the piece had uneven fiber distributi­on when put under the microscope.

“The surface of the fragment is yellow and quite rough, and the fibers are randomly yet densely interlaced,” Li said.

“These are the traits of an ancient papermakin­g technology, very different from Cai Lun’s, that ethnic minorities in Tibet, Yunnan and Xinjiang still use to make Kongming lanterns and transcribe scriptures.”

Li revealed his findings at a recent seminar, attended by more than 160 archaeolog­ists from China, Germany, Greece and Peru.

A crude type of paper was used as early as the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 24). However, Cai Lun, a eunuch in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD25-220), greatly reformed

The surface of the fragment is yellow and quite rough, and the fibers are randomly yet densely interlaced.” Li Xiaocen, archaeolog­ist at Nanjing University of Informatio­n Science and Technology

the art of papermakin­g and is regarded as the inventor of ancient paper and the papermakin­g process.

Li said the fragment predates Cai Lun’s invention by about 250 years, though controvers­y remains over whether the fragment should be identified as real paper.

“Further research should be conducted on, for example, the degree the pulp was beaten and the entire production process as well as the paper’s whiteness,” according to Chen Gang, a professor with the department of cultural heritage and museology at Fudan University. “But Li’s research is helpful for us to understand the full picture of ancient papermakin­g technology in China.”

 ??  ?? The ancient scrap of paper was unearthed 30 years ago in Gansu province.
The ancient scrap of paper was unearthed 30 years ago in Gansu province.

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