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Leonardo's wood charring method predates Japanese practice

arstechnica.com

1 points by perpil a month ago · 2 comments

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bell-cot a month ago

Not an expert - but I'd think that ancient people (at least in non-arid climates) would have noticed that the more-charred part of the wood in an old campfire did not crumble and rot, even over years.

  • perpilOP a month ago

    Agreed, maybe a forest fire or lightning strike might have made it more obvious that charring preserved. Charcoal in a campfire could have easily disappeared in the next fire.

    They do give Leonardo a lot of credit for a single sentence, but it may be the first documented instance of this charring technique.

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