Was Holy Shroud created in a flash? Italian researchers resurrect claim

Antonio Calanni / AP file

The Shroud of Turin bears the faded image of what appears to be a Christlike figure. Italian researchers say they've come close to the shroud's coloration by blasting strips of linen with ultraviolet laser light.

Last updated noon ET Dec. 27:

Italian researchers have resurrected the idea that the Shroud of Turin's mysterious image of a Christlike figure could only have been created by a powerful flash of light — but skeptics still aren't buying it.

Scientists have tussled with believers, and with each other, over the origins of the centuries-old cloth for decades: Many believers think it's the true image of Jesus, left behind miraculously on his burial cloths after his resurrection. Analyses of the Shroud's chemical makeup, as well as radiocarbon dating of fiber samples, have led lots of researchers to conclude that the image was painted onto the cloth during the 14th century. But other researchers, sympathetic to the Shroud's cause, say those tests were faulty.


The Italian studies, conducted at the ENEA Research Center in Frascati, addresses a specific question in Shroud science: Could a burst of radiation have created the coloration seen on the linen? The answer is yes, although the results reported in the latest studies aren't a perfect match. So does that mean the Shroud image could only have been created by the flash of a miraculous resurrection? The answer is no, despite what you might read on the Web.

Five years of tests
"Sadly, we have seen many claims spread in the Web made by journalist/bloggers that discuss the content of a paper they never read," lead researcher Paolo Di Lazzaro told me today in an email. "It is obvious that a serious scientific work cannot prove any supernatural action. We have shown that the most advanced technology available today is unable to replicate all the characteristics of the Shroud image. As a consequence, we may argue it appears unlikely a forger may have done this image with technologies available in the Middle Ages or earlier. The probability the Shroud is a medieval fake is really low. In this sense, the Shroud image is still a scientific challenge."

Di Lazzaro and his colleagues based their conclusions on five years of tests, using an ultraviolet laser apparatus and strips of modern-day linen. They blasted the cloth with UV at different power levels, and reported that they "achieved a very superficial Shroud-like coloration of linen yarns in a narrow range of irradiation parameters." The best effect depended on laser pulses lasting less than 50 nanoseconds.

"These processes may have played a role in the generation of the body image on the Shroud of Turin," the researchers report.

They don't go so far as to claim a miracle. But the fact that UV laser blasters didn't exist in the 13th century, let alone in Jesus' day, strongly implies that they suspect something out of the ordinary was going on.

Di Lazzaro told me that the tests were not financed by ENEA, which is a government-sponsored research agency, and were conducted outside working hours. "The research was curiosity-driven, the attempt to replicate an image which is considered 'the impossible image' due to its very peculiar characteristics," he said.

Over the years, Di Lazzaro and his colleagues have published a long list of studies, including peer-reviewed papers (see below). The latest studies were presented at a May conference in Frascati and published in November as an ENEA technical report (with a disclaimer saying that the contents didn't necessarily express ENEA's opinion). But they didn't really get traction until this week, just in time for Christmas, thanks to a series of sensationalized British news reports.

Critiquing Shroud science
Shroud science, also known as sindology, usually percolates outside the scientific mainstream — but every once in a while a sensational claim comes into the public spotlight. Joe Nickell, an investigator for the New York-based Center for Inquiry, has been following sindology for decades. He noted that the Italian research revives a discussion going back to the 1980s, spearheaded by a group called the Shroud of Turin Research Project, or STURP.

"This is really nothing new," Nickell told me today. "This is a supposed vindication of STURP."

Nickell said Di Lazzaro and his colleagues started out with the assumption that the coloration on the Shroud couldn't have been created by applying pigment to the linen — which runs counter to the conclusions drawn by other studies. Starting out with the idea that the human figure shown on the Shroud is an "impossible image" stacks the deck in favor of a miraculous explanation, he said.

"Making the assumption of a miracle is a really, really, really, really, really big assumption," Nickell said. "That it's done in the name of science is just astonishing."

Nickell said the latest findings don't prove much of anything, even though they're dressed up in high-tech tests.

"It is made up of whole cloth," he said. "The pro-Shroud people start with the answer, and then they have to get some scientific evidence to back this up."

From 2008: An American researcher says the Shroud of Turin might be the real burial cloth of Jesus after all.

Some folks would suggest that the Shroud of Turin is a valuable focus for faith, whether it's real or not. What do you think? How much value is there in studying the Shroud, and how much impact do scientifico-religious debates like this one have on your own thinking? Check out the Web links below, give it some thought, and add your comments.

Update for 4:15 p.m. ET Dec. 22: Di Lazzaro sent a follow-up email calling attention to his group's publications, which I've added below, and he poses this question for Joe Nickell: "Was he (or anybody else) able to reproduce by chemical paint, acid and any other color a depth of coloration which is 0.2 micrometer thick (that is, one-fifth of a thousandth of a millimeter)? We are talking of this, because on the Shroud, the image has a coloration depth so thin that it is impossible to do with any kind of painting. I can quote peer-reviewed papers that show this is the coloration depth of the Shroud image.

"By the way, Nickell will be interested to know that using VUV photons we obtained this shallow coloration thickness," Di Lazzaro wrote.

I'll pass the question along to Nickell, who says he doesn't use email. I suspect the answer could go along two tracks: One is that it's a tough thing to try to reproduce a precise coloration depth under any circumstances. The other is that centuries of wear and tear might have had an effect that's not easily replicated by the contemporary application of pigments or other chemicals. But we'll see what Nickell has to say.

Update for 2:15 p.m. ET Dec. 23: Nickell responded to Di Lazzaro's question, and added a couple of questions of his own:

"Paolo Di Lazzaro claims the Turin 'Shroud' coloration depth is 0.2 micrometers, but surely he does not claim that that was uniformly measured throughout the cloth. The coloration indeed appears to be generally confined to the topmost fibrils (although the face image does show faintly on the back of the cloth). Using a two-part hypothesis I put forward in 1983, Italian chemist Luigi Garlaschelli has produced a replica shroud with such superficial staining. So let me ask Lazzaro a question in turn: Have you been able, using your high-intensity ultraviolet laser technique, to produce a replica shroud yourself? Until you do, shouldn’t you stop slashing carelessly with Occam’s razor?"

Here's a 2009 Reuters report about the Garlaschelli replica.

Update for 3:50 p.m. ET Dec. 26: Di Lazzaro sent this response to Nickell's questions via email:

"In 1978, several sticky tapes were used to sample the Shroud in different points of the body image. When the image fibers were pulled out of the adhesive, their colored coatings had been stripped off the fiber and remained in the adhesive. These coatings were independently analyzed by Profs. Alan Adler and Ray Rogers, and all of them were too thin to measure accurately with a standard optical microscope. This means the thickness of all coatings was smaller than the visible light wavelength, say thinner than 0.6 micrometer.

"Recently, these results have been confirmed by a direct measurement of another fiber, showing the thickness of the colored coating around the fiber is about 0.2 micrometer. As a consequence, there is quite a good probability most of the image fibers throughout the body image have a coloration depth smaller than 0.6 micrometers.

"Prof. Garlaschelli claimed he obtained 'a superficial coloration' without mentioning 'how much' superficial. Is it 100 micrometers thick? 10 micrometers? One micrometer? Nobody knows. I asked chemists [who are] colleagues at ENEA, and they told me it is impossible to obtain a coloration depth smaller than 10 to 20 micrometers with the chemicals used by Prof. Garlaschelli. This fact alone means the results of Garlaschelli are not comparable with the Shroud image.  Mr. Nickell may be interested to know Prof. Garlaschelli refused to reply the letter sent to the editor of JIST (the journal that published his results) where several points of his work were criticized, including the lack of a measurement of the coloration depth.

"Coming to the question of Mr. Nickell: We never claimed to have reproduced the whole Shroud image. We were interested to gain a deeper insight into the physical and chemical processes that generated such an unusual image. And we were successful to find photochemistry processes that are able to generate a Shroud-like coloration of linen fibers.

"Concerning Occam's razor, I am a scientist, and when I wish to understand a phenomenon, seeking for a scientific explanation, I use microscopes, spectrometers, image detectors and other laboratory tools. I see Mr. Nickell prefers using philosophical instruments like the medieval Occam's razor, a theory proposed in the 14th century. Each of us is free to choose the most familiar tool to find answers."

Update for noon ET Dec. 27: And Nickell responds...

"Di Lazzaro equates the depth of colored coatings that were stripped from surface fibers (using adhesive tape) with the depth of penetration that might be determined by cross-sectioning of actual threads, then asserts that a single fiber’s examination (still apparently not cross-sectioned) has 'confirmed' the dubious claims. Given the tremendous evidence against the 'shroud' — its incompatibility with Jewish burial practices, lack of historical record, bishop's report of the forger’s confession, the still-bright-red 'blood' which failed forensic serological tests, the presence of pigments and paints throughout the image, three laboratories' radiocarbon dating of the cloth to the time of the confession (1260–1390), and much additional evidence — it would seem that Di Lazzaro is straining at a gnat and attempting to swallow a camel. Let him produce a shroudlike image according to whatever theory he can muster, and we'll talk again."

The chatter on the Shroud:

Earlier tales of the Shroud of Turin:

Journal references from Paolo Di Lazzaro:

Peer reviewed Journals:
G. Baldacchini, P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, G. Fanti: “Coloring linens with excimer lasers to simulate the body image of the Turin Shroud” Applied Optics vol. 47, 1278-1283 (2008).

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, A. Santoni, G. Fanti, E. Nichelatti, G. Baldacchini: “Deep Ultraviolet radiation simulates the Turin Shroud image” Journal of Imaging Science and Technology vol. 54, 040302-(6) (2010).

Conference Proceedings
P. Di Lazzaro, G. Baldacchini, G. Fanti, D. Murra, E. Nichelatti, A. Santoni: “A physical hypothesis on the origin of the body image embedded into the Turin Shroud” Proceedings of the Int. Conf. on The Shroud of Turin: Perspectives on a Multifaceted Enigma, edited by G. Fanti (Edizioni Libreria Progetto Padova 2009) pp. 116 – 125. ISBN 978-88-96477-03-08 01-12.

P. Di Lazzaro, G. Baldacchini, G. Fanti, D. Murra, A. Santoni: “Colouring fabrics with excimer lasers to simulate encoded images: the case of the Shroud of Turin”, XVIII Int. Symposium on Gas Flow, Chemical Lasers, High-Power Lasers, edited by R. Vilar, Proceedings SPIE vol. 7131 (2009) pp. 71311R-1 – 71311R-6.

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, A. Santoni, G.- Baldacchini: “Sub-micrometer coloration depth of linens by vacuum ultraviolet radiation”, Proc. International Workshop on the Scientific approach to the Acheiropoietos Images, edited by P. Di Lazzaro (2010) pp. 3 – 10.

D. Murra, P. Di Lazzaro: “Sight and brain, an introduction to the visually misleading images”, Proc. International Workshop on the Scientific approach to the Acheiropoietos Images, edited by P. Di Lazzaro (2010) pp. 31 – 34.

Technical Reports
G. Baldacchini, P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, G. Fanti: “Colorazione di tessuti di lino con laser ad eccimeri e confronto con l’immagine sindonica” ENEA RT/2006/70/FIM (2006).

P. Di Lazzaro: “Wissenschaftliche Hypothesen zur Entstehung des Bildes auf dem Turiner Grabtuch” 30Tagen n.4 (2010) pp. 63-66.

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, E. Nichelatti, A. Santoni, G. Baldacchini: “Colorazione similsindonica di tessuti di lino tramite radiazione nel lontano ultravioletto: riassunto dei risultati ottenuti presso il Centro ENEA di Frascati negli anni 2005 -2010” RT/2011/14/ENEA (2011).


Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

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One day you will see that Jesus didn't say that evolution doesn't exist or that the Bible is the word of God. You need to begin to realize the simple truths about Christ, which really has nothing to do with what is in the Bible and organized religion. Only then can you begin to understand who, and what Christ is. His message is much simpler than what Christians have created. If we discovered that Jesus was real, and everything he did was true, it would not in any way discredit evolution and science. Jesus never said the age of the Earth or that God himself created the Earth in 7 days. The truth is a grey area in the middle of science and organized religion. Once you know this, religion and science blend together in the most beautiful way. Seperation, and the need to control people create organized religion, and Atheists. The truth is, Jesus, God and evolution are all real.

  • 3 votes
Reply#355 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 4:06 PM EST

You may want to read Genesis as God did create the heavens and the earth.

Christians know Jesus is alive - we don't need to "discover" it.

    #355.1 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 4:33 PM EST

    You may want to read Genesis as God did create the heavens and the earth.

    That's nice. Prove it! using the bible to prove the bible is simply circular logic.

    Christians know Jesus is alive - we don't need to "discover" it.

    No, you only believe that. That doesn't make it true. There is a difference.

    The truth is, Jesus, God and evolution are all real.

    Well, you're 1/3 right.

    • 2 votes
    #355.2 - Thu Dec 29, 2011 2:45 AM EST
    Reply

    a piece of cloth wow humanity is pathetic you worry about an old filthy piece of cloth when there are things far more important than this and people worry about that old filthy rag

    • 1 vote
    Reply#356 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 6:01 PM EST

    I'm sorry, I aint trying to crap on christians or anything (many of them are very nice people). This, however, sounds like wishful thinking more than science. Just because a scientist says something doesn't make it science. We all have areas where we lose our objectivity, me included.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#357 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 6:21 PM EST

    well if Jesus is gonna return...look @ the line up of who he is gonna take out of existence..

    and since this all happened over there in the middle east where the bible came from...would it start over there?

    because living here in the USA the Original People had their own Spiritual Worship...we definately didn't need some book written over in the Old World that has been War Mongers for how many milleniums...

    Waste time on retesting this... ha... World is in constant WARS. Come on people...thinks JC would have issues with scientists and all who went against his teachings: of being nice to everyone.

    and to those who profess they are of some Old World Faith how well would you do living in that land from where all this came from ... and would you be willing to sacrafice your life and lifestyle like what went on over there.

    quotes from a book is not a way of life.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#358 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 7:06 PM EST

    MomOftheMIA Please tell me what is " The way of Life" do you think that the " nations " did not have " wars"?

      #358.1 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 7:42 PM EST
      Reply

      Interesting interpretations of a primitive Rohrshach pattern.

      Have some more fun at http://theinkblot.com/

        Reply#359 - Wed Dec 28, 2011 11:35 PM EST

        This article says that "researchers sympathetic to the Shroud's cause" have cast doubts on the radiocarbon dating. But in reality, one of the biggest early skeptics is now one of the biggest doubters of the radiocarbon dating process. He is not saying that the Shroud is Jesus' burial cloth, but he has pretty definitively shown that the carbon dating process was flawed since it took a sample that contained both the original shroud, and a patch. And when you do the math with every sample, taking into account the percentage of each sample that was original versus the patch, using the dates found with the carbon dating, he found the date was about the first century. For example...if you have 90% of the patch, from, say, 1870 and 10% of the original from the 30 AD, and the carbon dating will give a result of about the late 1600s. Whereas if you have 20% original and 80% patch, the carbon dating will have a result of 1500. And each sample they used fit this pattern perfectly, which explained why the three samples had such a big discrepancy in dates.

        Again, he was one of the biggest earlier detractors, and originally set out to prove the carbon dating to be correct.

          Reply#360 - Thu Dec 29, 2011 3:49 AM EST

          You make the false statement that your jc descended from David.

          First u say god gave Mary the child then u trace Joseph,s heritage. Which is it?

          which verse says jc changed the Sabbath form Yaweh?

          which verse says he changed how the places of worship could now have pagan symbols and windows?

          which verse does jc change the proof of the covenant between men and Yawe?

          • 1 vote
          Reply#361 - Fri Dec 30, 2011 4:23 PM EST

          Creator who sent His Chosen People into the promised land with instructions to kill every man, woman, and child there

          Just prior , giving them the Ten Commandments.

          Who sent man out of the Garden so he would not eat of the tree of life and live forever

          Who killed the two sons of Arum for not building the fires of the sanctuary correctly

          suddenly evolves into this all loving god jc

          and people live forever

          either in hell

          or in a mansion on streets of gold

          christians are great believers in evolution !

          I do not believe the part about jc .

          I am a servant of Yaweh.

          The Fear of Yaweh

          The First Step to Wisdom

          • 1 vote
          Reply#362 - Wed Jan 4, 2012 1:24 PM EST

          Why would an all-powerful being, even in an earthly incarnation, need a flash of light to reanimate a corpse? Did not this same mythological zombie man-god-thing command dead Lazarus to "Come forth" from his burial cave, and in front of witnesses without any flash of light?

          Somehow 1+1 is adding up to 3 here....

          • 1 vote
          Reply#363 - Fri Jan 6, 2012 9:16 AM EST

          Why would the one, that made such an effort to remove all body parts , so that they would not be Idolized, since God " Hates Idolatry " why would we think that that same God, made an error and allowed a " Flash " to undo all he done?

            Reply#364 - Sat Apr 21, 2012 2:46 AM EDT
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