Until recently, it was assumed that the ink used for writing was primarily carbon-based at least until the fourth and fifth centuries AD.
However, analyses of with X-ray microscopy show that black ink used by Egyptian scribes also contained copper an element previously not identified in ancient ink.
In the study published in the journal Scientific Reports, researchers showed that Egyptians used carbon inks that contained copper, which has not been identified in ancient ink before.
Although the analysed papyri fragments were written over a period of 300 years and from different geographical regions, the results did not vary significantly.
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The papyri fragments were investigated with advanced synchrotron radiation based X-ray microscopy equipment, and the particles found in the inks indicate that they were by- products of the extraction of copper from sulphurous ores.
The studied papyri fragments come from two primary sources: the private papers of an Egyptian soldier named Horus, who was stationed at a military camp in Pathyris, and from the Tebtunis temple library, which is the only surviving large-scale institutional library from ancient Egypt.
"This makes it impossible to produce maps of ink signatures that otherwise could have been used to date and place papyri fragments of uncertain provenance," he said.
"However, as many papyri have been handed down to us as fragments, the observation that ink used on individual manuscripts can differ from other manuscripts from the same source is good news insofar as it might facilitate the identification of fragments belonging to specific manuscripts or sections thereof," he said.