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Re: The Vinland Map Find Or Fraud?



24 November 2003

Michael Bernstein
American Chemical Society

"Vindication for Vinland map: New study supports authenticity"

"Recent conclusions that the storied Vinland Map is merely a clever
forgery are based on a flawed understanding of the evidence, according
to a scientist at the Smithsonian Institution.  Results from last year's
study debunking the map's authenticity can also be construed to boost
the validity of its medieval origins, the scientist claims.

The report will appear in the Dec. 1 edition of Analytical Chemistry, a
peer-reviewed journal of the American Chemical Society, the world's
largest scientific society.

The Vinland Map is a drawing of Iceland, Greenland and the northeastern
seaboard of North America that has been dated to the mid-15th century,
suggesting that Norse explorers charted North America long before
Columbus. The map, which has had a contentious history since its
discovery in the 1950s, resides at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library of Yale University.  It has been valued at more than $20
million.

"Many scholars have agreed that if the Vinland Map is authentic, it is
the only existing cartographic representation of North America prior to
Columbus," says Jacqueline Olin, a member of the advisory committee of
the Smithsonian Center for Materials Research and Education in
Washington, D.C.  "Its date is important in establishing the history of
European knowledge of the lands bordering the western North Atlantic,
and the deeper question of Columbus's own possible awareness."

In July 2002, two papers about the Vinland Map were published
simultaneously in separate scientific journals ・one in Radiocarbon,
which set a date for the map's parchment at about 1434 using carbon
dating; and another in Analytical Chemistry, claiming that the map is
really just a clever 20th-century forgery on medieval parchment.

Olin, who was involved in the Radiocarbon research, wrote the new
Analytical Chemistry paper in response to the controversy sparked by
last year's dueling papers.

Since the age of the parchment is not in dispute, Olin says, "The
information needed to prove that the Vinland Map is medieval rests with
the ink used to draw it."

Before the development of the printing press, manuscripts were written
in either carbon-based inks or iron gallotannate inks.  Erosion of the
latter often leads to yellow staining - a feature exhibited by the
Vinland Map.

In last year's Analytical Chemistry paper, British researchers analyzed
the ink with Raman microprobe spectroscopy and claimed that it is made
up of two parts: a yellowish line that adheres strongly to the parchment
overlaid with a black line that appears to have flaked off.

Because they found the black line contained carbon, the researchers
assumed the ink was not iron gallotannate, meaning there should be no
yellow staining.  They proposed that the yellow line was put there by a
clever forger who knew it was a common feature of medieval manuscripts.
This line contained anatase, a precipitated form of titanium dioxide.
Since anatase was not synthesized until 1917, they considered this as
evidence that the Vinland Map is a forgery.

To the contrary, the ink may help prove the map's authenticity, says
Olin.  "The presence of carbon in an ink is not evidence that the ink is
a carbon ink," she says.  "It could just as well have been iron gall ink
to which carbon has been added as a colorant."  Carbon was added to
medieval iron gall inks to enable scribes to view their writing while
the transparent ink mixture was reacting to form its black color.

Sensible ---- DSH

"The source of the iron in medieval inks is green vitriol, an iron
sulfate," Olin continues.  "Green vitriol would include anatase if the
iron source from which it was made included the iron-titanium mineral
ilmenite."

Researchers have reported the absence of ilmenite in the ink of the
Vinland Map, but that would only mean it was not present in the sulfate
used to make the ink, Olin says.  In earlier work, she made a simulated
15th century ink using ilmenite for the preparation of green vitriol.
The resulting ink contained anatase, and no ilmenite.

There has also been no discussion about the significance of the other
elements found in the ink, Olin says.  She used archaeological reports
to show that the presence of copper, aluminum and zinc *all found in the
Vinland Map's ink* would be consistent with medieval production methods
from green vitriol.  Additionally, these elements raise serious doubts
about the possibility of forgery, because 20th century iron gall inks
would not be produced using medieval hydrometallurgy, which is
responsible for the presence of these elements.  No forger in the first
half of the 20th century could be expected to know about these extra
components, according to Olin."
---------------------------------------

Watson, the plot thickens....

http://www.econ.ohio-state.edu/jhm/arch/vinland/vinland.htm

http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/photos/2002/vinland.jpg  ----
2,602,121 bytes

Deus Vult

D. Spencer Hines

Lux et Veritas et Libertas

Vires et Honor


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