You should be more clear. Yes, he's misunderstanding both counts; or yes, both statements are true?
Sorry. I am, as I said, having a bad day, physically.
Let me try again:
Slowvehicle (or anyone, really),
- So far, in my understanding,
1)The only tests (among the multitude of tests conducted) suggesting that the stains are not blood are those regarding the low level of potassium found -- and, that result has been sufficiently accounted for.
Yes, Mr. Savage, you are misunderstanding (or intentionally misstating) this point.
Not one,
not a single one, of the tests conducted by, or referenced by, H & A are positive for blood. At best, the tests indicate the presence of substances that are not inconsistent with the presence of blood.
I ddressed this here:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=10675254#post10675254
...a post which you have ignored.
There remains the fact that no source has ever claimed to have detected red blood cells (whole or degraded) on the CIQ.
There remains the fact that the stains on the CIQ do not behave in any manner consistent with the principles of fluid hydrodynamics, adsorption, or absorption.
There remains the fact that the "bloodstains" are adjunct to an anatomically preposterous (the
head comes to a chisel point), posturally impossible (have you assumed the
Shroud SlouchTM on a flat surface, yet?), scripturally ludicrous, historically indefensible, byzantine-styled representational image rendered on the sized and gessoed surface of a 780-year-old length of linen.
So, yes, you are misunderstanding (or intentionally misrepresenting) this point. As has been pointed out to you multiple times.
2)None of the tests conducted (including those conducted by McCrone Associates) have shown the iron earth pigment impurities expected in paint.
- Am I misunderstanding that?
Yes, you are misunderstanding this, or misstating it. Did you read
Bright Earth yet? Until the advent of aniline dyes (in the mid-17th Centry CE), almost all red, brown, or red-brown pigments were porphyrin-bearing organic compounds (cinnabar and rust [Iron(III) oxide] serve as the exceptions that prove the rule). The pigments in red clays and red earths (umbre, ochre, sienna) get their color from porphyrin compounds.
And you have YET to substantively address the results of the most scrutinized bit of
14C dating, ever.
When do you intend to provide your evidence that the CIQ is 2000 years old?