Muscat: The new laboratory marks a pivotal milestone in Oman’s efforts to preserve and protect its national memory. Designed to serve as an advanced technical hub, the facility will specialize in the physical and forensic analysis of historical documents and artifacts. The lab will enable experts to verify the authenticity and origin of various documentary materials by examining their biological, chemical, organic, and inorganic components.
This initiative will allow the NRAA to accurately determine the age and historical context of diverse materials, including paper, leather, bones, textiles, clay tablets, stones, and pottery. The facility will also analyze writing media through inscription and carving materials, and investigate the components of inks, dyes, pigments, and natural deposits found on historical items.
The laboratory will use cutting-edge technologies such as scanning electron microscopes, fluorescence X-ray devices for elemental analysis, advanced visible spectrum analyzers, and FT-IR chemical analyzers. These tools will help identify features like watermarks, fiber patterns, shadows, and light traces—further enhancing the precision of document verification.
By leveraging visible spectrum, infrared, ultraviolet, and 3D stereoscopic techniques, the lab aims to unravel the aging effects and human interactions etched into historical items over centuries.