Kevin Graham wrote:Will operated under the assumption that the Scroll contained an umbilicus at the center. But it was an assumption without evidence. Cook and Smith now argue that it was rolled up in a tube. Why? Because that is what these measurements and calculations indicate. Unlike Will and Gee, they let the evidence steer their conclusons, not vice-versa. Despite Will's nitial pedantic rection above, these measurements are perfectly consistent with what one would expect in a tubed scroll.
For the record, I have tried to
avoid appealing to the existence of an umbilicus, because the eyewitnesses do not mention one. I suspect the very center of the roll was simply hollow (
a la Hoffmann's statement that the wraps can't be actualize under a certain length), perhaps explaining why the center-most wrappings might have been more slack than the outer ones. I have also always operated under the assumption that the papyrus was stored on the mummy's breast in a tube, because several early witnesses report such. The only reason I had not mentioned this before was that it did not seem relevant to the present discussion.
In short, if the measurements are now militating against an umbilicus and in favor of a tube, then they are simply confirming what one might guess from eyewitness evidence.