Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/26/do-proteins-hold-the-key-to-the-past Some excerpts: "In recent years, proteomic studies of art works and archeological remains have yielded biological information of startling clarity, revealing gossamer-thin layers of fish glue on seventeenth-centu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Klaus Graf
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Archivalia 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://archivalia.hypotheses.org/92900
id ftopenedition:oai:hypotheses.org:archivalia/92900
record_format openpolar
spelling ftopenedition:oai:hypotheses.org:archivalia/92900 2023-05-15T16:33:05+02:00 Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts Klaus Graf 2018-12-11T01:19:09Z http://archivalia.hypotheses.org/92900 unknown Archivalia info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/2197-7291 http://archivalia.hypotheses.org/92900 post 2018 ftopenedition 2018-12-16T01:10:50Z https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/26/do-proteins-hold-the-key-to-the-past Some excerpts: "In recent years, proteomic studies of art works and archeological remains have yielded biological information of startling clarity, revealing gossamer-thin layers of fish glue on seventeenth-century religious sculptures and identifying children’s milk teeth from pits of previously unrecognizable Neolithic bones. In 2008, researchers were able to sequence the proteins of a harbor seal that remain. Other/Unknown Material harbor seal OpenEdition
institution Open Polar
collection OpenEdition
op_collection_id ftopenedition
language unknown
description https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/26/do-proteins-hold-the-key-to-the-past Some excerpts: "In recent years, proteomic studies of art works and archeological remains have yielded biological information of startling clarity, revealing gossamer-thin layers of fish glue on seventeenth-century religious sculptures and identifying children’s milk teeth from pits of previously unrecognizable Neolithic bones. In 2008, researchers were able to sequence the proteins of a harbor seal that remain.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Klaus Graf
spellingShingle Klaus Graf
Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
author_facet Klaus Graf
author_sort Klaus Graf
title Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
title_short Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
title_full Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
title_fullStr Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
title_full_unstemmed Proteomics of Medieval Manuscripts
title_sort proteomics of medieval manuscripts
publisher Archivalia
publishDate 2018
url http://archivalia.hypotheses.org/92900
genre harbor seal
genre_facet harbor seal
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/2197-7291
http://archivalia.hypotheses.org/92900
_version_ 1766022798115864576