Chemical and biological methods help restore ancient books in north China

opinions2024-05-21 07:13:15268

Gao Xuemiao binds a restored ancient book at Tianjin Library in north China's Tianjin Municipality, April 22, 2024. (Xinhua/Sun Fanyue)

Tianjin Library is home to a collection of 590,000 ancient books and has conducted ancient book restoration work for over 70 years.

Gao Xuemiao, 38, leads the restoration team at the library. He is the first restoration expert with a background in chemistry since the establishment of the department in 1978.

Nowadays, ancient book restoration is increasingly viewed as a cross-disciplinary process. The incorporation of chemical and biological methods brings the process a more scientific dimension. "We conducted chemical analyses before the restoration process to find the matched paper, and make tailored plans for each ancient book," Gao said.

Gao Xuemiao selects paper samples for ancient book restoration at Tianjin Library in north China's Tianjin Municipality, April 22, 2024. (Xinhua/Sun Fanyue)

Address of this article:http://estonia.arnoldview.org/content-43e998989.html

Popular

Supreme Court rejects an appeal from a Canadian man once held at Guantanamo

Minor league infielder Keiner Delgado traded from Yankees to Pittsburgh Pirates

Abuse allegations against former Olympic rower, coach found to be credible, US Rowing probe says

Judge dismisses lawsuit against Saudi Arabia over 2019 Navy station attack

Burglar hurled stolen mobile phones at police from the top of 60ft high roof during nine

Rangers' Max Scherzer scratched from 2nd scheduled rehab start because of sore thumb

Arkansas' elimination of 'X' for sex on driver's licenses spurs lawsuit

Missouri Supreme Court strikes down 2022 vote on Kansas City police funding

LINKS