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Home Technology Science & History

Lost for Millennia, “Egyptian Blue” Is Finally Recreated

Arjuman Arju by Arjuman Arju
June 6, 2025
in Science & History
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Lost for Millennia, “Egyptian Blue” Is Finally Recreated
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For centuries, the world marveled at the luminous, almost otherworldly shade of “Egyptian blue”—a pigment that once adorned the walls of ancient tombs, the jewelry of pharaohs, and the intricate art of civilizations long gone. Now, thanks to a collaborative scientific breakthrough, we may finally have the ancient formula for the world’s oldest known synthetic pigment.

A Color That Lit Up the Ancient World

Used as far back as 5,000 years ago, Egyptian blue once dazzled across the artifacts of Ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Yet over time, the secrets behind its creation were lost—its recipe fading into history much like the civilizations that once relied on it.

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But that mystery may now be solved.

A team of researchers from Washington State University, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Carnegie Museum of Natural History has successfully recreated not just one—but 12 versions of Egyptian blue. Their findings not only help demystify how this ancient pigment was made but also open doors to futuristic applications in science and technology.

“These findings enrich previous scientific, archeological, and historical efforts to understand the uses and chemical properties of Egyptian blue,” the researchers wrote in their study.

Rebuilding the Ancient Blueprint

The team began their journey in an almost poetic way: mixing together ancient ingredients in a modern lab, trying to replicate the techniques early artisans may have used. At its core, Egyptian blue is a mix of copper, calcium carbonate, quartz sand, and an alkali flux, but how these were processed remained the missing link.

“It started out just as something fun to do,” said John McCloy, lead author and director of WSU’s School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering. “They asked us to produce materials to put on display at the museum. But there’s a lot of interest in the material.”

The researchers tested different copper sources—CuO, azurite, and malachite—with and without sodium carbonate (Na₂CO₃) to act as a flux. Heating the combinations under conditions replicable by ancient kilns, they used modern technologies to compare their synthetic pigments against samples from authentic artifacts.

A Pigment Full of Surprises

One of the most surprising revelations? Egyptian blue doesn’t need to be entirely blue to appear vividly so.

“The ‘bluest’ pigment only needed about 50 percent of the blue-colored components,” said McCloy. “You can see that every single pigment particle has a bunch of stuff in it—it’s not uniform by any means.”

This discovery reveals the incredible craftsmanship of ancient pigment makers, who, despite lacking modern tools, were able to produce a material still admired today.

Beyond Beauty: Egyptian Blue’s Modern Superpowers

While the team’s goal was to better understand the pigment for historical and display purposes, their work uncovered something far more significant: Egyptian blue isn’t just beautiful—it’s smart.

The pigment is known to absorb visible light and re-emit it at near-infrared wavelengths—a rare property that can be harnessed for:

  • Energy-efficient materials
  • Biomedical imaging
  • Telecommunications
  • Security inks and crime scene forensics
  • Potential advancements in superconductors

This means a pigment first synthesized in ancient Egypt could one day help power the technologies of the future.

Unlocking the Past to Shape the Future

For now, the research stands as both a tribute to ancient innovation and a testament to modern science.

“We hope this will be a good case study in what science can bring to the study of our human past,” McCloy said. “The work is meant to highlight how modern science reveals hidden stories in ancient Egyptian objects.”

By unraveling the long-lost secrets of Egyptian blue, scientists haven’t just recreated a color—they’ve reignited a bridge between the past and the future.

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