How did the Turin Shroud get its image?
With thanks to BBC news website - Click here for original article
On Sunday, Pope Francis will "venerate" the famous
Shroud of Turin, which is thought by some to be the burial wrapping of Jesus
Christ - and by others to be a medieval fake. Whatever it is, it's a mystery
how the cloth came to bear the image of a man. Science writer Philip Ball
discusses the theories.
In a carefully worded announcement, the Archbishop of Turin says
that the Pope "confirms the devotion to the shroud that millions of
pilgrims recognise as a sign of the mystery of the passion and death of the
Lord".
You'll notice that this says nothing about its authenticity. The
Catholic Church takes no official position on that, stating only that it is a
matter for scientific investigation. Ever since radiocarbon dating in 1989
proclaimed the 14ft by 4ft piece of linen to be roughly 700 years old, the
Church has avoided claiming that it is anything more than an "icon"
of Christian devotion.
But regardless of the continuing arguments about its age
(summarised in the box at the bottom of this page) the Shroud of Turin is a
deeply puzzling object. Studies in 1978 by an international team of experts -
the Shroud of Turin Research Project (Sturp) - delivered no clear explanation
of how the cloth came to bear the faint imprint of a bearded man apparently
bearing the wounds of crucifixion.
There's no shortage of hypotheses. Some suggest that the image
came about through natural processes; some impute considerable ingenuity to
medieval forgers of relics; others invoke wondrous physical processes
associated with the Resurrection. But do any have any merit?
If this were true, it should be possible to identify the
pigments used by chemical analysis, just as conservators can do for the
paintings of Old Masters. But the Sturp team found no evidence of any pigments
or dyes on the cloth in sufficient amounts to explain the image. Nor are there
any signs of it being rendered in brush strokes.
In fact the image on the linen is barely visible to the naked
eye, and wasn't identified at all until 1898, when it became apparent in the
negative image of a photograph taken by Secondo Pia, an amateur Italian
photographer. The faint coloration of the flax fibres isn't caused by any
darker substance being laid on top or infused into them - it's the very
material of the fibres themselves that has darkened. And in contrast to most
dyeing or painting methods, the colouring cannot be dissolved, bleached or
altered by most standard chemical agents. The Sturp group asserted that the
image is the real form of a "scourged, crucified man… not the product of
an artist". There are genuine bloodstains on the cloth, and we even know
the blood group (AB, if you're interested). There are traces of human DNA too,
although it is badly degraded.
That didn't prevent the American independent chemical and microscopy
consultant, Walter McCrone, who collaborated with the Sturp team, from
asserting that the red stains attributed to blood were in fact very tiny
particles of the red pigment iron oxide, or red ochre. Like just about every
other aspect of the shroud, McCrone's evidence is disputed; few now credit it.
Another idea is that the image is a kind of rubbing made from a bas-relief
statue, or perhaps imprinted by singeing the fabric while it lay on top of such
a bas-relief - but the physical and chemical features of the image don't
support this.
If the coloured imprint comes from the darkening of the
cellulose fibres of the cloth, what might have caused it? One of the doyens of
scientific testing of the shroud, Raymond Rogers of the Los Alamos National
Laboratory in New Mexico, argued in 2002 that a simple chemical transformation
could do the job. He suggested that even very moderate heat - perhaps 40C
(104F) or so, a temperature that post-mortem physicians told him a dead body
could briefly attain if the person died from hyperthermia or dehydration -
could be enough to discolour the sugary carbohydrate compounds that might be
found on the surface of cotton fibres. It doesn't take a miracle, Rogers
insisted. This is a reassuringly mundane idea, but there is little evidence for
it in this particular circumstance - it's not as if it happens all the time on
funeral shrouds.
Another idea is that the discoloration of the fibres was caused
by a chemical reaction with some substance that emanated from the body. The
French biologist, Paul Vignon, proposed in the early 1900s that this substance
might have been ammonia, produced by the breakdown of urea in sweat. That won't
work, though: the image would be too blurry. In 1982, biophysicist John DeSalvo
suggested instead that the substance could be lactic acid from sweat. This
compound is one of those responsible for so-called Volckringer images of plant
leaves, left for years between the pages of a book: substances are exuded from
the leaf and react with paper fibres to produce a dark, negative image.
3. It's a photograph
Secondo Pia's photograph showed that the image on the cloth is a
negative: dark where it should be bright. This deepens the mystery, and Pia
himself casually suggested that the shroud could have been made by some
primitive kind of photography. That idea has been inventively pursued by South
African art historian Nicholas Allen, who argues that it could in principle
have been achieved using materials and knowledge available to medieval scholars
many centuries before genuine photography was invented. The key to the idea is
the light-sensitive compound silver nitrate, the stuff that darkened the
emulsion of the first true photographic plates in the 19th Century, as light
transformed the silver salt into tiny black particles of silver metal.
This substance does seem to have been known in the Middle Ages,
Allen says: it was described in the writings of the 8th Century Arabic
alchemist, Jabir ibn Hayyan, and also by the German Dominican Albertus Magnus
in the 13th Century. It could have been coated on to the cloth in a darkened
chamber and exposed to sunlight through a lens - made of quartz not glass,
since the silver is in fact darkened by ultraviolet light, which glass absorbs
but quartz does not. Allen has made replicas of a shroud this way using model
figurines. But how the image stays on the cloth when the silver is removed, and
how mediaeval forgers gathered all this sophisticated knowledge about optics
and chemistry without there being any trace in surviving documents poses
problems for the idea. So do various issues about the exact shape and contrast
of an image made this way. For most Turin Shroud theorists, Allen's idea is a
triumph of ingenuity over plausibility.
According to an international team of scientists and other
interested folk called the Yahoo Shroud Science Group, hypotheses about the
genesis of the shroud "involving the Resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth
cannot be rejected". Among them, the group members write, "are
hypotheses correlated to an energy source coming from the enveloped or wrapped
Man, [and] others correlated to surface electrostatic discharges caused by an
electric field". Since these hypotheses appear to invoke processes unknown
to science, which presumably occur during a return from the dead, it's
technically true that science can't disprove them - nor really say anything
about them at all.
Some, however, are not deterred by that. Italian chemist Giulio
Fanti of the University of Padua has proposed that the image might have been
burnt into the upper layers of the cloth by a burst of "radiant
energy" - bright light, ultraviolet light, X-rays or streams of
fundamental particles - emanating from the body itself. Fanti cites the account
of Christ's Transfiguration, witnessed by Peter, John and James and recounted
in Luke 9:29: "As he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and
his clothes became as bright as a flash of lightning." This is, to put it
mildly, rather circumstantial evidence. But Fanti suggests we might at least
test whether artificial sources of such radiation can produce a similar result
on linen.
According Raymond Rogers, all
kinds of pseudoscientific theories have been put forward that invoke some
mysterious radiation, which not only made the image itself but distorted the
radiocarbon dating. In general they start from the notion that the shroud must
be genuine and work backwards from that goal, he said. Little has changed in
the decade and more since Rogers made this complaint. But still it has to be
said that the piece of cloth Pope Francis will venerate is genuinely and
stubbornly perplexing.
In 1989 it looked for a moment as though the link between the
Turin Shroud and the burial of Christ was finally broken. Three independent
teams of scientists had been given scraps of the linen, which they analysed
using radiocarbon dating - a technique that uses the decay of a natural, radioactive
form of carbon to figure out how long ago a once-living sample ceased to be
alive (and thus in this case when the cloth was made from plant fibres). The
verdict: the shroud dates from between about 1260 and 1390. It was a medieval
item.
But almost at once, objections were raised. Some argued that the
samples tested had come from later additions to the original cloth. Others said
that the radiocarbon "clock" had been reset by a fire in the 16th
Century that damaged parts of the shroud, or that the findings were distorted
by the more recent growth of bacterial or fungal "biofilms" on the
threads. The authors of the 1989 paper have discounted those possibilities, but
the controversy won't die down. In 2013 Giulio Fanti described dating studies on
the shroud using a non-standard method involving spectroscopy (absorption of
light of different colours), which he says place the age instead between 300 BC
and 400 AD: perfect for true believers.
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