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Restoration of
the Dead Sea Scrolls

The Dead Sea Scrolls, most of which are made of parchment, survived
for some 2,000 years in caves near the Dead Sea, thanks to the particular
climate inside the caves. Since they were removed from their surroundings,
scholars have been searching for ways to protect them from the harmful
effects of time, changes in temperature and humidity, environmental
pollution, and public display.

The Shrine of the Book, which opened in 1965, was entrusted with
the display and preservation of the Scrolls. The Israel Museum's
restoration team together with the staff of the Shrine of the
Book, have tried their utmost to maintain the condition of the
scrolls and prevent their deterioration, but as precise preservation
techniques and maintenance procedures to be followed were hitherto
unknown, conservation of the scrolls has been a matter of trial
and error for about fifty years. New techniques to arrest deterioration
of the scrolls and repair any damage caused in the past were long
overdue and, indeed, crucial. Consequently the Israel Antiquities
Authority turned for help to the Getty Conservation Institute
in California, the world's leading conservation facility. An extensive,
in-depth study was carried out by the Institute's scientific team,
and based on its findings and recommendations, the Shrine of the
Book, in 1997, started a long-term restoration program to improve
the state of the eight scrolls in its possession. Each scroll
fragment, both those on display in the Shrine of the Book and
those kept in a specially secured room, undergoes special treatment
by experts in the conservation laboratories of the Israel Antiquities
Authority. Treatment includes thorough cleaning, flattening, mending
with Japanese tissue, and other conservation procedures.

As part of our effort to create more suitable conditions for
preserving and displaying the scrolls in the Shrine of the Book,
a prototype for a new showcase has been devised to test display
techniques (such as fiber optic lighting and positioning the scrolls
at an angle of no more than 35 degrees) which are in keeping with
world standards. If this experiment succeeds, all the showcases
in the Shrine of the Book will be replaced.
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