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Scientists re-examining Shroud of Turin's authenticity PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 23 March 2008

Washington, March 23 (ANI): Scientists have shown that the Shroud of Turin, the 14- by 4-foot linen considered by some to have been wrapped around Jesus after the crucifixion, might not be a medieval hoax.

Twenty years after radiocarbon dating supposedly proved that the Shroud was fake, scientists are revisiting their research to see if the tests were flawed and the shroud really dates back to the time of Christ.

The long strip of tightly woven linen that bears the ghostly image of a bearded man who had apparently been crucified has been venerated since the Middle Ages as the burial shroud of Jesus. And written references to the existence of such a cloth date back to the first century.

The director of one of three laboratories that dismissed the shroud as a medieval artifact has now called for the science community to reinvestigate the linen's authenticity.

"With the radiocarbon measurements and with all of the other evidence which we have about the shroud, there does seem to be a conflict in the interpretation of the different evidence," Discovery News quoted Christopher Ramsey, director of England's Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit, which carried out radiocarbon dating tests on the cloth in 1988, as saying.

In 1988, three reputable laboratories in Oxford, Zurich and Tucson carried out radiocarbon tests on the cloth and declared it a brilliant, medieval fake produced between 1260 and 1390.

However, Shroud scholars, known as sindonologists, have always argued that no medieval forger could either have produced such an accurate fake or anticipated the invention of photography.

Yet, despite arguments and claims of revisionist scholars, all theories on how the radiocarbon tests could have been inaccurate have been rejected by the scientific community.

Meanwhile, a new study, published in the book "La Sindone, una Sfida alla Scienza Moderna" ("The Shroud, a Challenge to Modern Science"), by Giulio Fanti, further supports Ramsey's call for revisiting the carbon-14 tests.

Fanti cites a study by Gerardo Ballabio of the Shroud Science group.

"The study, carried out by the researcher Gerardo Ballabio of the Shroud Science group, does add a new twist. It looks at a less known aspect of the C14 tests: how the linen sample was divided into sub-samples by the three laboratories who performed the radiocarbon tests in 1988," Fanti, a professor at Padua University in Italy, said.

"Basically, it is a re-analysis of the available data which takes into consideration the spatial positions of the sub-samples on the shroud. It shows that the 1988 statistical results are not correct," he added.

A previous study by Bryan Walsh, director of the Shroud of Turin Center in Virginia, suggested that differing levels of cabon-14 were present when examining the horizontal positions of sub-samples from the shroud. But the question of whether a gradient also existed in the vertical direction remained open.

It is known that the samples distributed to each lab in 1988 were first cut from a corner of the shroud. Basically, the sample consisted of an 81- by 16-mm rectangle weighing 300 mg. The rectangle had a missing corner as a result of a previous sample extraction.

"This piece of linen was split into two parts. One was divided into three samples to be given to the laboratories, and another was retained in case further material was necessary. Since one of the three samples was significantly smaller than the others, a thin section from the retained part was added to the smaller sub-sample," Ballabio said.

The samples were sealed, documented and forwarded to the labs along with control samples for testing and evaluation. The laboratories in Oxford and Zurich were each given one of the single-piece samples, while the laboratory in Arizona was given the two-part sample.

What happened later is a subject of controversy, according to Ballabio.

"Each lab subdivided the sample in various pieces, making it a puzzle to reconstruct their original position on the shroud," Ballabio said.

In order to reconstruct how the samples were cut, their physical positions on the shroud, and the lab measurements for each sub-sample, Ballabio collected information from many key people involved in the testing operation.

"I ended up with 256 possible combinations," Ballabio said.

The researchers performed a statistical analysis which involved each of the 256 configurations and concluded that there is a strong difference in the 14C concentration of the small rectangle used in the tests, with the upper-right corner being about 300 years younger than the lower left corner.

According to Ballabio, the study shows that the sample must have been substantially contaminated.

"The statistical tests performed by the labs assumed a 14C homogeneity in the samples, but my statistical evaluation shows exactly the opposite and puts into serious question the validity of the dating. Since a 300-year difference is present in a few square inches, one must wonder how this data translates into a 14- by 4-foot-long linen," Ballabio said. (ANI)
 
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In association with Regional Institute of Journalism and Mass Communication (RIJAM), Guwahati