
The Vesuvius Challenge
Luke Farritor was the first person to decipher a word from ancient scrolls as part of the Vesuvius Challenge. TheVesuvius Challengeis a competition for people to use modern technology to decipher the secrets of ancient rolled-up papyrus scrolls. They hail from an ancient library in the Roman city of Herculaneum and, as a result of Mount Vesuvius erupting in 79 CE, were fossilized into carbon and are incredibly fragile, per the competition’swebsiteandNature.
On Thursday, the Vesuvius Challenge announced during apress conferencethat the 21-year-old computer-science major had won the “First Letters” prize of $40,000, after successfully deciphering and reading more than 10 characters in a 4-square-centimeter area of a scroll.
Luke Farritor with the unopened Herculaneum scroll.The Vesuvius Challenge

Farritor became the first contestant to submit the required number of legible letters in the competition. During the press conference, he shared his excitement about the initial moment of spotting the letters.
“I saw these letters and I just completely freaked out,” Farritor said. “I freaked out, almost fell over, almost cried.”
“I took a screenshot. I immediately sent it to JP Posma, who sent it to everyone else. I sent it to my family. My mom called and she was like, ‘Hey, like this is the first thing that you sent me that really looks like the letters. This is really cool,’ ” he explained.
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Farritor first made the discovery late one night and said he knew he needed to “improve” the photo. “I was like… let’s keep going until it got to something that looks a lot like the image you’re seeing today,” he said.
Since Farritor reported his findings first, he was awarded the main prize, however, the second-place winner, Youssef Nader, also discovered the word in the same area and was awarded the $10,000 cash prize.
Farritor’s use of AI to read letters from the Herculaneum scrolls came as they were considered too fragile to unfurl and, according to the Vesuvius Challenge website, they would “turn to dust” if handled improperly.
Federica Nicolardi, a papyrologist at the University of Naples and member of the academic committee that reviewed Farritor’s findings, said, perNature, that the objects are “crazy” and “all crumpled and crushed.”

EduceLab/The University of Kentucky
The fragility of the scrolls is a result of them dating back to 79 CE, after Mount Vesuvius erupted and destroyed Pompeii, Italy. The somma-stratovolcano caused mudslides to form that left the city of Herculaneum covered in over 65 feet of volcanic ash, perNature.
As a result of the volcanic eruption, the heat transformed hundreds of papyrus scrolls from a library in Herculaneum into fossilized chunks of carbon, according to the outlet. For the next 1,700 years, the scrolls were buried in mud, until 1752 when they were finally excavated.
Researchers at The University of Kentucky’s EduceLab.EduceLab/The University of Kentucky

Nicolardi said, per Nature, that Farritor’s discovery “was such a dream." She added, “I can actually see something from the inside of a scroll.”
Thea Sommerschield, a historian of ancient Greece and Rome at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, explained, per Nature, that this discovery could “revolutionize our knowledge of ancient history and literature."
While Farritor was able to decode this, there are still several unread scrolls. As a result, the Vesuvius Challenge has challenged researchers to read four passages in the two scanned scrolls in order to win the $700,000 grand prize.
source: people.com