A new dating method has revealed that some of the Dead Sea Scrolls are older than previously believed. Two fragments have even been dated to the same period in which their authors lived — specifically, the second and third centuries BCE — making them very recent copies of the original manuscripts.
The discovery was made by researchers from the project The Hands That Wrote the Bible, led by University of Groningen researcher Mladen Popović. Previous datings relied on handwriting analysis alone. In this new study, that approach was combined with C14 dating. The combined data were processed using Enoch, a machine learning model that analyzes raw images of handwritten manuscripts to estimate their age. The model produces dating results with a margin of uncertainty of just thirty years.