Author Topic: Mass spectrometry technique helps identify forged Robert Burns manuscripts  (Read 369 times)

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rangerrebew

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Mass spectrometry technique helps identify forged Robert Burns manuscripts
July 27, 2018 by Bob Yirka, Phys.org report
 

A team of researchers at the University of Glasgow has developed a mass spectrometry technique to identify forged manuscripts. In their paper published in the journal Scientific Reports, the group describes their technique and how well it worked when testing known forged Robert Burns manuscripts.

Robert Burns was an influential Scottish poet and is best known outside his home country for a poem he wrote that was turned into the song "Auld Ang Syne"—which is traditionally sung on New Year's Eve around the world. Burns lived from 1759 to 1796, and wrote poems, songs and other works on paper held in binders, which subsequently became manuscripts. He also used a variety of inks which were also typical of the time. Burns eventually became so well known that his original manuscripts became valuable—so valuable that others attempted to cash in on his success by forging manuscripts, which they attempted to sell as originals. One forger, Alexander Smith, was particularly good at it, and reached a degree of notoriety himself when he was finally exposed and sent to prison. In this new effort, the researchers have used the work of both men to test a forgery detecting technique they developed based on both mass spectrometry and a deep learning network—a technique that does not damage the material being tested.


Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2018-07-mass-spectrometry-technique-forged-robert.html#jCp

Offline truth_seeker

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Burns

"Through his twelve children, Burns has over 600 living descendants as of 2012.[34]"

This is a good wiki. Plenty of details. My mother's maiden name is derived from a stream and a village, in the same "Shire" named "Ayrshire," where burns came from.

In a life of just 37 years this man left literature, and stories.
"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln