Murray wrote:manicsloth wrote:obviously the shroud is a fakeSwimmy wrote:
Evidence?
Clearly he had none because he did the usual post-and-run. His comment didn't even make sense.
Murray wrote:manicsloth wrote:obviously the shroud is a fakeSwimmy wrote:
Evidence?
StMonicaGuideMe wrote:Murray wrote:manicsloth wrote:obviously the shroud is a fakeSwimmy wrote:
Evidence?
Clearly he had none because he did the usual post-and-run. His comment didn't even make sense.
The outside framing of the shroud (added 15th century) was what they carbon dated since the church wouldn't let them take a piece near the face of jesus.La Volpe wrote:Not to put a dapper on the situation but the Shroud of Turin is most likely fake. They carbon twice both came out to around the 1470's. I'd ike to believe it's the Lord's burial cloth but the evidence is stacked against it. I personally believe it was made by Da Vinci using an early form of photography. Just my 2 cents...
Not only that but in a video I saw manuscripst of the shroud for the past few hundred years and there were many that SHOWED the shroud being grasped in that exact corner that was dated. I suspect carbon contamination from sweat(hand), oil(hand), and dust(storage) that would make it look younger.Murray wrote:The outside framing of the shroud (added 15th century) was what they carbon dated since the church wouldn't let them take a piece near the face of jesus.La Volpe wrote:Not to put a dapper on the situation but the Shroud of Turin is most likely fake. They carbon twice both came out to around the 1470's. I'd ike to believe it's the Lord's burial cloth but the evidence is stacked against it. I personally believe it was made by Da Vinci using an early form of photography. Just my 2 cents...
This post is completely wrong even of the dating of the now invalidated c-14 tests. Those tests came out with an age of between 1260-1390 . The davinci conspiracy theory is rediculous because even the invalidated c14 test dates are before davinci's time. The Hungarian pray codex alone destroys both the davinci and the c-14 tests because in the codex is an unmistakable picture of the shroud complete with the 3 poker holes and the rare triple herringbone weave of the shroud which wasn't known in the time of davinci or the dates put forth by the c-14 tests.La Volpe wrote:Not to put a dapper on the situation but the Shroud of Turin is most likely fake. They carbon twice both came out to around the 1470's. I'd ike to believe it's the Lord's burial cloth but the evidence is stacked against it. I personally believe it was made by Da Vinci using an early form of photography. Just my 2 cents...
That last paragraph left me breathless, "The pollen content is so high it can only mean that G. Tournefortii must have been physically laid down on the Shroud."“Floral Images on Shroud of Turin Intrigue Botanist"
Prof. Avinoam Danin (Botanist, Hebrew University of Jerusalem) - "Danin...has confirmed that of the hundreds of floral patterns on the sheet [i.e. Shroud], 28 are of flower species that still grown in Israel, 70 percent of them in a 10-square kilometer area between Jerusalem and Jericho. At least one of them, Zygophyllum (Dumosum), a kind of desert tumbleweed (actually a shrub), grows only in Israel and parts of neighboring Jordan and Sinai, as it did 2,000 years ago in the time of Jesus....Most of the floral images were clustered around the head of a bearded man who appeared to have been whipped and crowned with thorns and crucified. The positioning would have been consistent with the Jewish burial practice then of banking fresh flowers around the head of the deceased. Also consistent, Danin said, was the fact that a majority of the identified species were also used medicinally as a kind of preservative of the body....Danin said that the preponderance of botanical evidence – the presence of the exclusive Zygophyllum, along with the so many other species indigenous to the Holy Land, plus forensic evidence that the flowers were picked in the spring, at the time of the Passover and Crucifixion - convinces him that the shroud dates from the first century AD. (Danin says the reporter misquoted him as to any indication of a date and that what the evidence points to is that the Shroud must have originated in Jerusalem. The pollen does not indicate when, except that it was in the spring.)
"Some 96 percent of the 28 flower species identified on the shroud grow between Jerusalem and the Qumran Caves. Add the southern Dead Sea area to the equation and 100 percent of the species can be found, said Danin."
"I can't say for certain that it was Jesus’ shroud. But this evidence backs up the possibility that it is genuine, and there is no doubt that it comes from the Land of Israel."
The significance of both the pollen and flower images is profound. The evidence of the pollen grains of Gundelia Tournefortii causes Danin to believe that “They became part of the Shroud at one event-when in Jerusalem”. In fact, they found that 40 % of the total number of pollen found on the Shroud is from this one type of plant. The pollen content is so high it can only mean that G. Tournefortii must have been physically laid down on the Shroud. Dr. Danin has also found images of four leaves of the plant Zygophylum Dumosum which also indicates that the plant must have been physically laid on the Shroud. And it’s only found in Israel! The notion that the Shroud originated in Israel and was used in an actual burial ceremony now has strong new evidence.
StMonicaGuideMe wrote:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religio ... -robe.html
The scientists set out to "identify the physical and chemical processes capable of generating a colour similar to that of the image on the Shroud." They concluded that the exact shade, texture and depth of the imprints on the cloth could only be produced with the aid of ultraviolet lasers – technology that was clearly not available in medieval times.
The scientists used extremely brief pulses of ultraviolet light to replicate the kind of marks found on the burial cloth.
They concluded that the iconic image of the bearded man must therefore have been created by "some form of electromagnetic energy (such as a flash of light at short wavelength)." Although they stopped short of offering a non-scientific explanation for the phenomenon, their findings will be embraced by those who believe that the marks on the shroud were miraculously created at the moment of Christ's Resurrection.... "But as scientists, we were concerned only with verifiable scientific processes. We hope our results can open up a philosophical and theological debate but we will leave the conclusions to the experts, and ultimately to the conscience of individuals."