So in 2000, he created
three-dimensional computer models of the pages of a damaged manuscript,
Otho B.x
(an 11th-century collection of saints’ lives), then developed an
algorithm to stretch them, producing an artificial “flat” version that
didn’t exist in reality. When that worked, he wondered if he could go
even further, and use digital imaging not just to flatten crinkled pages
but to “virtually unwrap” unopened scrolls—and reveal texts that hadn’t
been read since antiquity. “I realized that no one else was doing
this,” he says.
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