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<title>PHYSorg.com: PHYSorg news tagged with: manuscripts</title>
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     <title>World's oldest surviving Bible published online</title>
   	 <description>About 800 pages of the world's oldest surviving Bible have been pieced together and published on the Internet for the first time, experts in Britain said Monday.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news166106367.html</link>
	 <category>Technology</category>
	 <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 13:39:50 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Carl Linnaeus invented the index card</title>
   	 <description>As a consequence of overseas discoveries, early modern scientists faced serious information overload. The sheer amount of exotic, hitherto unknown species reaching the shores of Europe forced naturalists to reconsider the ways in which information about the natural world was processed and organized.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news164342304.html</link>
	 <category>Biology</category>
	 <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2009 03:39:04 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Feared by the bad, loved by the good? Scientists discover previously unknown document on Robin Hood</title>
   	 <description>(PhysOrg.com) -- A freshly-discovered document highlighting negative attitudes towards Robin Hood has been deciphered by an academic at the University of St Andrews.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news156178681.html</link>
	 <category>Other Sciences</category>
	 <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2009 15:59:14 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>UCLA team creates virtual library of medieval manuscripts</title>
   	 <description>Google "Edward the Confessor" and you'll get page after page of links to biographies of this 11th-century English king, to Westminster Abbey, which he founded and where he is buried, and to the Magna Carta, which was partly inspired by laws enacted during his 24-year reign.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news153499567.html</link>
	 <category>Technology</category>
	 <pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2009 14:46:40 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Researcher Uses DNA Testing to Unlock Secrets of Medieval Manuscripts</title>
   	 <description>(PhysOrg.com) -- Thousands of painstakingly handwritten books produced in medieval Europe still exist today, but scholars have long struggled with questions about when and where the majority of these works originated. Now a researcher from North Carolina State University is using modern advances in genetics to develop techniques that will shed light on the origins of these important cultural artifacts.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news150976551.html</link>
	 <category>Chemistry</category>
	 <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2009 09:55:51 EST</pubDate>
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