Results from This Site: 231 - 240 of 339 total results for Radiocarbon Dating of the Shroud of Turin
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Lejeune; Lirey; Turin, where, hosted by Prof. Bruno Barberis and Gino Moretto of the 'Centro' we viewed for the first time the impressive crystal display case in which the Shroud now reposes behind
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Shroud’s body image than anything produced to date. I have spent countless hours studying Rinaudo’s impressive experiments and results, however, without any basis whatsoever, Rogers asserts: “His
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spent an hour and a quarter meeting in Turin with Cardinal Ballestrero. At this meeting the two Americans formally presented the STURP group's proposals for new tests on the Shroud, a document of some
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secret chamber built beneath Turin's Royal Palace to protect the Shroud following the earliest air raids at the end of the First World War; and a most illuminating translation of chapter 16 of a guidebook
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observers keen to know the historical provenance of the Shroud of Turin, I welcome the decision to subject the relic to radiocarbon dating. However, clouds loom on the horizon, in the form of confusions
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indicative of the Shroud now being the property of the Pope and his successors following ex-king Umberto of Savoy's death in 1983. Although the exact details of the radio-carbon meetings are as yet
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Correlation of image intensity on the Turin Shroud with the 3-D structure of a human body shape" [1]. In this long paper (26 pages!) that I consider one of the most important work published by STURP
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Turin to students, some of whom are destined to become future priests, I was curious what impact this might have on their perception of faith in general and posed the following question for the final
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serious proposals for renewed scientific testing of the Shroud already lodged in the in-trays of desks in Turin and Rome, and ASSIST's about to follow, a breakthrough cannot be too far away. The likelihood
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and a description of the latest developments in radiocarbon dating at the Oxford Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art. Peter Freeland writes: Congratulations to you, John Lynch