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AI helps decode scrolls destroyed during the Vesuvius eruption

- Jonny Walfisz

Through Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), a team of researcher­s have decoded the text of an Ancient Greek scroll burnt in the Pompeii eruptions nearly two millennia ago.

In decoding the document, the team have won a contest called the Vesuvius Challenge, named after the volcano that erupted and destroyed the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneu­m in AD 79. During the cataclysmi­c eruption, a library of papyrus scrolls was buried.

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This library is known as the Herculaneu­m Papyri and was discovered in 1752 by a farmer. At first, most of the charred scrolls were thought to just be charcoal. It was only when someone noticed the faint trace of letters that the breadth of historical knowledge trapped under carbonised papyrus was recognised.

Although early attempts to decipher some of the delicate scrolls resulted in their destructio­n, hundreds of other scrolls have been housed in museums around the world. Last year, following advances in x-ray technology that allowed scientists to read the unopened Dead Sea scrolls, a challenge was set to try and do the same for the Herculaneu­m Papyri.

The Vesuvius Challenge was set up by Nat Friedman, Daniel Gross, and computer scientist Brent Seales with a prize fund of over $1 million (€ 930,000) and a top prize of $850,000 (€ 790,000) to go to anyone who could successful­ly decoding 5% of one of the scrolls of the papyri.

Created in 2023, the challenge closed at midnight on 1 January 2024. After running through the many submission­s, the winners of the coveted prize have been announced.

Youssef Nader, Luke Farritor, and Julian Schilliger were the winners of the huge top prize. All three were already known to the competitio­n. The 21-year-old Farritor is a SpaceX intern from Nebraska and had already won $40,000 (€ 37,000) from the challenge for successful­ly decoding the first full word of the scrolls when he found the word “ΠΟΡΦΥΡΑϹ”

(purple).

Similarly, Nader is an Egyptian PhD student in Berlin who read a few columns of text a few weeks after Farritor. Nader won the second place prize for that challenge, but the clarity of his version over Farritor placed him as the leader for the supergroup he formed with the Nebraskan.

Finally, finishing off the supergroup is Schilliger, a Swiss robotics student in Zurich who has won prizes for his 3D maps of the papyrus.

Together, this dream team of techno-archaeolog­ists created a 3D model of the architectu­re of the scrolls and designed an AIbased ink detection code to generate a digital rendering of the text. All the code created has been made publicly available on GitHub by the team.

Thanks to their work, 5% of the first scroll has now been deciphered, a challenge seemingly impossible to the farmer who discovered the treasures 272 years ago.

According to the Vesuvius Challenge, the content of the scrolls is a never-before-seen text from antiquity. Scholars are hard at work to fully understand the meaning of what the team discovered, but initial readings believe it may be the musings on pleasure of Epicurean scholar Philodemus, who is believed to be the philosophe­r-inresidenc­e where the scrolls were found.

The end of the scroll remarks on the value of things in abundance over the value that comes from scarcity: “as too in the case of food, we do not right away believe things that are scarce to be absolutely more pleasant than those which are abundant.”

“Is the author Epicurus' follower, the philosophe­r and poet Philodemus, the teacher of Vergil? It seems very likely,” Richard

 ?? ?? The charred scroll
The charred scroll
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