Dead sea scroll
One man rescued overnight in Dead Sea, another two found drowned in Caesarea and Lake Kinneret
After intensive searches of the beaches and sea, the missing man was located in the water, about 2 km south of the beach he was last seen.
AI model 'Enoch' reveals Dead Sea Scrolls are older than believed
Dead Sea Scrolls aged decades older by AI-powered discovery
Phylacteries were not colored black 2,000 years ago, new study reveals
German-Israeli project to bring the Dead Sea Scrolls alive on the screen
An advantage offered by a digital edition is that readers can test the editorial decisions by directly interacting with the primary data.
Dead Sea Scrolls fragments at DC museum are fake, its officials say
A team of researchers led by an art fraud investigator issued a 200-page report saying that while the fragments may be made of ancient leather, but the ink was from modern times.
Could studying ancient ink help shed new light on the Dead Sea Scrolls?
The study of manuscripts offers scholars a treasure trove of information hidden in plain sight, complementing those presented by the texts themselves
Deciphered Dead Sea Scrolls pose questions for historians
Deciphered by Prof. Ariel and Faina Feldman, the segments written in semi-cursive script, folded and were encased in small leather remnants.
What's the connection between Ilan Ramon's diary, Dead Sea Scrolls?
The Israel Museum’s new exhibit connects the unlikely story of the biblical character Enoch and Israel’s first astronaut, Ilan Ramon.
Dead Sea
The Sea of Salt.
Israel hopes to beat treasure hunters with new excavations in Qumran caves
New discoveries could help solve the debate over who authored the Dead Sea Scrolls.
DC Bible Museum pulls fake Dead Sea scrolls
The Israel Antiquities Authority told the 'Post' that many forgeries are circulating on the foreign market.
A reflection on the significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls
We have arrived at a point when we truly have a right to celebrate seventy years of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
A biblical story retold
The relic, which is currently on display, is part of the Genesis Apocryphon, which contains a description, in Aramaic, of the lives of Noah, Abraham, Enoch and Lamech.