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Re: The Vinland Map Find Or Fraud?



New Debate Over Old Map

NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 26, 2003

By Diane Scarponi
Associated Press

[Images of the "Vinland Map" located at Yale University in New Haven,
Connecticut. ---- DSH]

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

http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/photos/2002/vinland.jpg  ---- 2.5
megabytes

"There is no evidence this is a forged titanium dioxide ink."

Jacqueline Olin

(AP) The latest scientific analysis of a disputed map of the medieval
New World supports the theory that it was made 50 years before
Christopher Columbus set sail.

The study examined the ink used to draw the Vinland Map, which belongs
to Yale University.  The map is valued at $20 million - if it is real
and not a clever, modern-day forgery.

A study last summer said the ink on the parchment map was made in the
20th century.

But chemist Jacqueline Olin, a retired researcher with the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, said Tuesday her analysis shows the ink was
made in medieval times.

"There is no evidence this is a forged titanium dioxide ink," said Olin,
whose paper appears in the December issue of the journal Analytical
Chemistry.

The authenticity of the map has been debated since the 1960s, when
philanthropist Paul Mellon gave it to Yale.  The university has not
taken a position on its authenticity.

The map depicts the world, including the north Atlantic coast of North
America. It includes text in medieval Latin and a legend that describes
how "Leif Eiriksson," a Norseman, found the new land called Vinland
around the year 1000.

Scholars have dated the map to around 1440.  Some scholars have
speculated that Columbus could have used the map to find the New World
in 1492.

Last summer, Olin and other researchers announced that carbon-14 dating
of the parchment showed it was made around 1434 - exactly the right time
for the map to be genuine.

However, researchers from University College in London examined the ink
on the map and announced last summer that it cannot be more than 500
years old.

Tests in the 1970s by Walter McCrone - who also had disputed the
authenticity of the Shroud of Turin - found the ink contained anatase, a
form of titanium dioxide that is common in inks made after 1920.
Anatase is found in nature, but the crystals of anatase were too
regular-shaped to have been natural, McCrone said.

Olin's study looked at various minerals found in the ink, including
aluminum, copper and zinc.  All these minerals, she said, would have
been byproducts of the medieval ink manufacturing process.

Also, she said anatase also could have ended up in the ink because of
the manufacturing process, and its crystal size and shape could have
changed over time.

She actually said far more than that about the presence of anatase. ----
DSH

Research is continuing into the Latin writing on the map."
------------------------------------------------

D. Spencer Hines

Lux et Veritas et Libertas

Vires et Honor


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