Restoration of Art Cleaning With Saliva Wins Harvard’s Chemistry Ig Nobel Prize for 2018

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Restoration of Art Cleaning With Saliva Wins Harvard’s Chemistry Ig Nobel Prize for 2018 Painting conservation and cleaning artifacts with saliva is hard-pressed humor from Harvard. The tongue in cheek award was reported in “Chemistry World” which has been given out since 1991 and is called the “Ig® Nobel Prize”, “For achievements that first make people LAUGH then make them THINK”

The award is not for a traffic stopping discovery... its been part of the restoration processes, probably, for millennia. This year’s chemistry Ig Nobel prize has been awarded for showing that human saliva is a good cleaning agent for paintings and historical artifacts. Paula Romaã o, Adíília Alarcaã o and Ceí sar Viana’s, three Portuguese conservation scientists, showed in their 1990 paper how they measured saliva’s effectiveness at removing dirt from antique gilded sculptures. It is also used for many other artifacts including paintings. They acknowledged that saliva is often used as a cleaning solvent when working with delicate materials such as gold leaf and ceramics. “I know that it seems quite improbable, but human saliva is indeed an effective cleaning agent for surfaces like paintings, sculptures and gilded wood. But don’t try


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