University of Copenhagen: Danish chemist helps England extend lifespan of world-renowned shipwreck
The crown jewel of Henry VIII’s 16th century fleet was its flagship, the venerable Mary Rose. More than 500 years after its launch, the vessel remains a precious cultural treasure. Though she ploughed the Atlantic and battled with her heavy cannons for 34 years – and laid buried beneath the turbulent English Channel for 437 more, bacteria and chemicals have begun eating away at her remnants, on display at the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth, England. Thankfully, the ship’s conservators have received a helping hand.
A new X-ray method has allowed an international team of researchers to identify zinc-sulfide nanoparticles in the ship’s timbers that are contributing to the ship’s decay. Until now, this information was impossible to learn from the wood.
Among those involved in the project is Kirsten Marie Ørnsbjerg Jensen, a 36-year-old chemist at the University of Copenhagen. Jensen leads the Nanostructure Group at the Department of Chemistry, where her research focuses on the internal structures of materials, right down to the nano-level. Here, she scans materials using advanced X-ray technology, among other techniques. This puts her on home turf for this atypical research project.
“We have analyzed timber from the Mary Rose by way of a new technique that is somewhat comparable to how a hospital’s CT scanner works. The difference is that our scanning method combines CT scanning with what’s known as X-ray scattering. It lets us analyze the structure of materials at an atomic level, which makes it possible to find and map substances within the ship’s wood. It gives us information about what is contributing to the wood’s decay, so that it can be better preserved in the future,” explains Associate Professor Kirsten Marie Ørnsbjerg Jensen.
Facts
• Using a new X-ray technique, researchers from Denmark, France, England and the United States identified a number of destructive substances in the wooden hull of The Mary Rose, a 510-year-old English warship – information that was once impossible to get at.
• The new technique opens up the possibility for improving archaeological conservation methods.
• The Mary Rose was a carrack-type naval vessel and the flagship of Henry VIII’s Tudor navy.
• The Mary Rose was one of the English fleet’s largest naval vessels over four decades of sporadic warfare. It is one of the earliest examples of a purpose-built warship.
• The ship sank with 500 men aboard, just off the coast of Portsmouth, during a battle against France.
• The ship weighed 500 tons and was armed with heavy guns hidden behind gun-ports.
• Read more about the warship the Mary Rose on the museum’s website and on Wikipedia
Vulnerable timbers, after four centuries on the seabed
The Mary Rose sank during a naval battle with France in 1543 and was excavated in 1982, in what remains the world’s most expensive salvaging operation – an event watched by 60 million viewers on live TV. At the time, 19,000 objects from the Tudor period were fished from the sea along with the shipwreck.
Today, the remains of the ship are on display at The Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth. But after more than 400 years at the bottom of the English Channel, the wooden ship’s hull is vulnerable to decomposition. The threat includes deposits from metal parts on the ship and bacteria which trigger acid attacks on the timbers. The same threat applies to other cultural artefacts around the world that degrade after being found.
Thanks to the new technique, known as ‘x-ray computed tomography with pair distribution function analysis’ (ctPDF), hope remains for the legendary vessel as well as other cultural artefacts and archaeological relics around the world. The method helped the researchers identify a number of destructive substances that decompose wood when it resurfaces and is exposed to oxygen once again. These include zinc sulfides.
“To find a way to stop these decomposition processes, it is important to know what the sulfides are composed of and where they are. This technique allows us to do just that,” explains Kirsten Marie Ørnsbjerg Jensen.
Conserving cultural heritage in the future
The Mary Rose Trust, which is the foundation behind the purpose-built museum for the old warship, is excited about the new X-ray technique.
“Being able to peer into the timbers of the Mary Rose and decode not only the wood’s structure, but also, the degree of degradation, how the wood was treated in the past and the impact of the marine environment, provides fascinating insight. It presents us with a wealth of knowledge that we can use to understand how materials respond to specific treatments and environments, and to devise strategies to keep our cultural heritage intact for future generations,” explains Professor Eleanor Schofield, Deputy Chief Executive Officer of the Mary Rose Trust.
The article is published in the scientific journal Matter The project was conducted in a collaboration among the University of Sheffield, the University of Copenhagen, Columbia University, the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility and The Mary Rose Trust.