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1
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- Exploring the Mystery
- Confronting the Controversy
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2
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- Image is from iron oxide pigments composing red ocher paint suspended in
an animal protein binder
- Blood is from vermilion…not blood
- The obvious work of an artist
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3
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- Dr Alan Adler, Professor of physical and organic chemistry, U. of Penn,
- Western Connecticut State University
- World’s leading blood porphyrin expert
- Dr John Heller, Professor of internal medicine and medical physics
- Yale University, New England Inst.
- Both are blood chemistry specialists
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4
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- “In light of our chemical findings, we disagree with these (McCrone’s) conclusions.”
- “We find his conclusion to be inconsistent with the chemical picture
presented. One of the few causes
of the body image that CAN be ruled out is a painting.”
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5
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- Twenty two (22) samples analyzed
- Six--blood image
- Two--body image adjacent to blood marks
- Two--body image only
- Three--water stain/body image
- One --non-image
- Four--waterstain/non-image
- Two--scorch
- Two--backing cloth
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6
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- “Polarized studies were carried out on specimens only after their
removal from the tape and adhering adhesive to prevent misinterpretation
due to the optical properties of the tape itself.”
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7
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- Spanish linen--circa 1700 AD
- Coptic linen--circa 350 AD
- Pharaoh era linen--circa 1500 BC
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8
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- Insect parts, pollen, spores, wax, modern synthetic fibers, red and blue
silk, wool
- Red and blue silk fibers are on every sample--probably from the backing
cloths and borders.
- Demonstrates transposition of materials from folding and unfolding of
cloth
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9
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- Does one particle of vermilion really prove anything?
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10
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- At 50X magnification--image is due to yellowed fibrils
- At 1000X--two types of red particles are “occasionally present” on the
fibrils
- Iron oxide and the Shroud image have different spectral characteristics
- Iron oxide particles do not account for yellow image
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11
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- X-rays show iron oxide highly concentrated in the water stain and
charred areas
- X-rays do not show significant concentration on the body image areas
- If present, it does not demonstrate the density required for the image
to appear to the unaided eye
- Image is not due to inorganic pigments
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12
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- Many organic pigments fluoresce under UV
- The body images are non-fluorescing
- Using all known organic solvents, the body image color cannot be
extracted
- “We conclude that no material has been added
- to these yellowed fibrils to produce the color”
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13
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- Fibrils appear uncoated
- Body image fibrils test negative for protein to nanogram level--no
binder present
- Corroded fibril surfaces typical of cellulose degradation from oxidation
- Same effect demonstrated on control samples using heat
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14
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- Physical and spectral properties of the image that can
- be replicated with control samples:
- Corroded appearance of fibrils
- Lower tensile strength of image fibrils
- Thermally stable
- NOT water soluble
- Yellowing due to oxidation/dehydration
- No matting of fibers
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15
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- Major blood areas:
- Wounds--wrist, side
- Blood flows--small of back
- “Scourge” marks from torso and leg
- Blood flows on top and back of head
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16
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- Fibrils in blood areas cemented together
- Appears as matting even in thin fluid areas
- No image visible in thin “serum” areas indicating that such fibrils were
sealed and therefore protected from the advanced decomposition reaction
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17
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- Partially clotted blood applied to linen
- Left to dry for eighteen months
- Samples removed by sticky tape
- Same general appearance as Shroud blood samples
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18
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- Red coated fibrils test positive for heme materials and proteins
- Thin blood areas test positive for serum albumin
- Proteins found only in blood areas--not in image areas--no organic
binder present
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19
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- Red coated fibrils dissolve in protease solution indicating blood
components
- Iron oxide particles--found mostly in water stain areas--do not dissolve
- Iron oxide particles are different from blood particles with no evidence
of being suspended in a paint binder
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20
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- Three kinds found:
- Cellulose bound iron--chelated all over cloth from retting of the flax
- Heme bound particles--from blood
- Iron oxide--mostly found in water stain margins and charred blood areas
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21
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- From charred blood?
- From the retting of flax?
- Iron oxide present is 99% pure
- Same as control samples
- Lack of contaminants is inconsistent with claim of being a medieval
painting
- Medieval paints usually contain manganese, nickel or cobalt above 1%
level
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22
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- At least 52 painted copies of the Shroud have been touched to the cloth
to achieve “sanctification” of the painting…like signing a baseball
card.
- Experiments have shown that paint particles will dislodge from the
painted copy and get distributed onto the Shroud.
- What does one particle of vermilion prove?
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23
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- “We see no evidence for stains or dyes on the body image fibrils at
levels that would be evident to the eye.”
- “To conclude that any of the images were produced by the application of
such pigments, they must be shown to be predominantly present and in the
appropriate locations.”
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24
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- “McCrone sees at trace levels far below the limits that would provide a
visually detectable color evident to the eye. This is entirely
consistent with contamination due to the artists who have copied the
Shroud”
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