In a monumental leap towards a greener future, AgriFutures Australia proudly presents the outcomes of the Carbon Initiative Program, a $2 million commitment fueling 15 pioneering research projects.
investigation that jackson had to unable to complete an accurate dating of the material. then in 1988 the catholic church took the unprecedented step of giving permission for pieces of the cloth to be removed for carbon testing. samples were cut from the edge of the shroud and sent for testing in three independent laboratories in london, zurich and arizona. the possibility that a piece of archaeology could prove to us that jesus christ was crucified, buried and raised from the dead, this is the most significant moment in human history.
but he believes there s an even more important reason to study the sedarium. for him, the stains on the cloth are like a fingerprint. unique to one person. if this cloth was wrapped around the head of another person who maybe suffered the same kind of torture and wounds, then stains would have a different shape and format. for gusken this was to prove kit # critical because when the team compared these with those on the shroud, they made an extraordinary discovery. the blood stains appeared to match. so we conclude that two cloths were used at the same time for the same event to cover the same body. carbon testing of cloth has not delivered any clear results.
based on the research that i ve been involved in, i think that we are looking at the historic burial cloth of jesus 2,000 years ago. but there was one part of the investigation that jackson had to unable to complete: an accurate dating of the material. then in 1988, the catholic church took the unprecedented step of giving permission for pieces of the cloth to be removed for carbon testing. samples were cut from the edge of the shroud and sent for testing in three independent laboratories in london, zurich and arizona. the possibility that a piece
there s an even more important reason to study the sudarium. for him, the stains on the cloth are like a fingerprint, unique to one person. if this cloth was wrapped around the head of another person who had maybe even suffered the same kind of torture and wounds, then the stains would have a different shape and a different format. for guscin, this was to prove critical because when the team compared these bloodstains on the sudarium with those on the shroud, they made an extraordinary discovery. the bloodstains appeared to match. so we can conclude the two cloths were used at the same time for the same event to cover the same body. carbon testing of the cloth has not delivered any clear results, but the first written