hugh farey
Muse
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2013
- Messages
- 506
Ask Hugh....
Right, Huru the Guru speaketh.
Riani and Atkinson demonstrated a statistical probability of some chronological gradient across the radiocarbon sample. They further demonstrated that the further you go from the end of the Shroud, the older the sample. Various authenticists have claimed to see stains, discolouration or variability in fluorescence on the radiocarbon corner, lessening towards the middle of the Shroud. When I pointed out a little while ago that if this interpolation had any effect on the radiocarbon date, then the more the contamination, the older the Shroud would appear (not the other way about), then they all quickly agreed that any surface contamination would have been completely removed and had no effect on the radiocarbon date at all. So everybody, authenticists and non-authenticists, are now agreed that surface contamination has had no effect on the radiocarbon date. In any case, none of it could be called 'repair' or 'mending' or 'patch,' even if, as I suspect, the observed discolouration is the effect of an attempt to make the Holland cloth conform more closely to the colour of the Shroud by smearing it with dye.
So what are we left with? Contaminant, patch or mending advocates suggest that the threads of the Shroud itself must have been replaced by more modern ones, to repair or patch the Shroud. However, if this had been accomplished by any process of interweaving, even by the celebrated 'French invisible weaving' then it would still be easily visible under a microscope. So that's out.
But! Just suppose that the radiocarbon corner was gently pulled apart into its constituent threads, all sticking out of the Shroud to a length of a couple of centimetres, and that those threads were then unravelled into wispy fibres, and that new threads, similarly unravelled, were twisted into the old threads, and maybe smeared with a bit of glue for reinforcement, and then the whole thing was carefully rewoven in exactly the same way, then might we end up with a repair that was truly invisible, and the only thing showing that one thread had been twisted into a new one would be that the new one has flecks of cotton in it. Do I accept that this has been done? No I don't. Given the shoddy handling of the Shroud from 1355 to 1978, I can't think that anyone would be bothered to repair one minute corner fragment and leave all the clumsy stitching of the 1532 fire patches untouched. Furthermore, the absence of cotton elsewhere on the shroud is amply contradicted by John Heller in his book Report on the Shroud of Turin, and the selective way in which Roger's picks and chooses which of Walter McCrone and Heller & Adler's experiments are acceptable leaves much to be desired.
In short, Jabba, and anybody else who cares to read this, I do not accept that any repair has been carried out on the radiocarbon corner of the sample, and believe that any contamination of the radiocarbon corner made the Shroud appear older, not younger, than it really is.
Right, Huru the Guru speaketh.
Riani and Atkinson demonstrated a statistical probability of some chronological gradient across the radiocarbon sample. They further demonstrated that the further you go from the end of the Shroud, the older the sample. Various authenticists have claimed to see stains, discolouration or variability in fluorescence on the radiocarbon corner, lessening towards the middle of the Shroud. When I pointed out a little while ago that if this interpolation had any effect on the radiocarbon date, then the more the contamination, the older the Shroud would appear (not the other way about), then they all quickly agreed that any surface contamination would have been completely removed and had no effect on the radiocarbon date at all. So everybody, authenticists and non-authenticists, are now agreed that surface contamination has had no effect on the radiocarbon date. In any case, none of it could be called 'repair' or 'mending' or 'patch,' even if, as I suspect, the observed discolouration is the effect of an attempt to make the Holland cloth conform more closely to the colour of the Shroud by smearing it with dye.
So what are we left with? Contaminant, patch or mending advocates suggest that the threads of the Shroud itself must have been replaced by more modern ones, to repair or patch the Shroud. However, if this had been accomplished by any process of interweaving, even by the celebrated 'French invisible weaving' then it would still be easily visible under a microscope. So that's out.
But! Just suppose that the radiocarbon corner was gently pulled apart into its constituent threads, all sticking out of the Shroud to a length of a couple of centimetres, and that those threads were then unravelled into wispy fibres, and that new threads, similarly unravelled, were twisted into the old threads, and maybe smeared with a bit of glue for reinforcement, and then the whole thing was carefully rewoven in exactly the same way, then might we end up with a repair that was truly invisible, and the only thing showing that one thread had been twisted into a new one would be that the new one has flecks of cotton in it. Do I accept that this has been done? No I don't. Given the shoddy handling of the Shroud from 1355 to 1978, I can't think that anyone would be bothered to repair one minute corner fragment and leave all the clumsy stitching of the 1532 fire patches untouched. Furthermore, the absence of cotton elsewhere on the shroud is amply contradicted by John Heller in his book Report on the Shroud of Turin, and the selective way in which Roger's picks and chooses which of Walter McCrone and Heller & Adler's experiments are acceptable leaves much to be desired.
In short, Jabba, and anybody else who cares to read this, I do not accept that any repair has been carried out on the radiocarbon corner of the sample, and believe that any contamination of the radiocarbon corner made the Shroud appear older, not younger, than it really is.