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Unlocking history through automated virtual unfolding of sealed documents imaged by X-ray microtomography

Humanities

Unlocking history through automated virtual unfolding of sealed documents imaged by X-ray microtomography

J. Dambrogio, A. Ghassaei, et al.

This groundbreaking research conducted by Jana Dambrogio and her team unveils a fully automatic computational method that reconstructs and unfolds volumetric scans of locked letters, revealing their hidden contents and intricate crease patterns, while maintaining vital letterlocking evidence. This innovative approach has even deciphered an unopened Renaissance letter for the first time!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Computational flattening algorithms have been successfully applied to X-ray microtomography scans of damaged historical documents, but have so far been limited to scrolls, books, and documents with one or two folds. The challenge tackled here is to reconstruct the intricate folds, tucks, and slits of unopened letters secured shut with “letterlocking,” a practice—systematized in this paper—which underpinned global communications security for centuries before modern envelopes. We present a fully automatic computational approach for reconstructing and virtually unfolding volumetric scans of a locked letter with complex internal folding, producing legible images of the letter’s contents and crease pattern while preserving letterlocking evidence. We demonstrate our method on four letterpackets from Renaissance Europe, reading the contents of one unopened letter for the first time. Using the results of virtual unfolding, we situate our findings within a novel letterlocking categorization chart based on our study of 250,000 historical letters.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 02, 2021
Authors
Jana Dambrogio, Amanda Ghassaei, Daniel Starza Smith, Holly Jackson, Martin L. Demaine, Graham Davis, David Mills, Rebekah Ahrendt, Nadine Akkerman, David van der Linden, Erik D. Demaine
Tags
letterlocking
computational method
volumetric scans
Renaissance
historical letters
restoration
digital imaging
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