Hi ConstantLearner,
I guess you missed my earlier posts:
- See post 214. … The image on the Shroud appears to be made of the degraded cellulose of the Shroud itself, possibly augmented by an iron based pigment, of which very little remains. We do not know whether the Shroud as we see it today is the same as it was when it was made. Some earlier commenters said it had been washed and boiled in oil. A realistic possibility is that it was painted or dabbed with an iron based pigment in a slightly acidic medium, from which most of the pigment has been washed away.
Another possibility, as I explain immediately above, is that a bas-relief was covered with paint and the Shroud laid on top.
- I explain this immediately above: “[It is] quite correct that ‘it would be unlikely for a 14th century artist to choose to make an image similar to a photographic negative.’ I don’t think an artist chose any such thing. I think he did choose to show what a dead body covered in bloody sweat might leave on a shroud. The photographic negative effect was a coincidental but inevitable consequence.”
- See post 201. "The blood marks on the Shroud are not in the palms because the palms are not shown on the Shroud. You have to extrapolate backwards, from the exit wound to the entry wound. Even some authenticists think that doing so gives an entry wound in the palm.
Why not look at the bloodstain yourself. (Try Shroud Scope: it’s a really useful online resource)
P(name removed by moderator)oint exactly where you think the centre of the exit wound is. Not as easy as it looks, is it?
P(name removed by moderator)oint the knuckles of the first and fourth fingers. A little easier, maybe.
Connect the three points in a triangle, and measure Angle A (Knuckle - Wound - Knuckle).
Reconstruct that same angle on your own hand. (Or a photo of your hand, which is much easier).
Much to your surprise, the exit wound is much closer to your fingers than you think, and therefore much more likely to have been depicted as being the result of an entry wound through the palm, just where artists traditionally put it,
It is true that the 19th century physician Pierre Barbet calculated, with the assistance of some dead people, that the nail had passed through the space of Destot, damaging the median nerve. However, Fred Zugibe, a 20th century forensic pathologist, ridiculed Barbet’s ignorance, and declared that the nail had gone through a quite different space, and had not damaged the median nerve, and that the median nerve doesn’t go anywhere near the space of Destot anyway. In the 21st century Matteo Bevilacqua, an Italian pathologist, has discovered that the nail didn’t go anywhere near either of the earlier suggestions, but at the base of the armbones. Other pathologists, all highly qualified and experienced, have identified two further possible sites. That’s five in all.
Some people have claimed that the nails had to go through the wrists or they would have torn through the flesh. This assumes, of course, that the victim wasn’t standing on a platform. Some of the earliest depictions of a crucifixion show the victim standing on a platform."