News

The details of Moraes’ findings have been published in an article for Archaeometry, including acknowledgements of all of the ...
A 3D analysis comparing the way fabric falls on a human body versus a low-relief sculpture shows that the Shroud of Turin was ...
The mystery surrounding one of the world’s most famous religious relics may finally be solved, according to new research.
A researcher has examined blood patterns on the cloth which appears to suggest it might have come into contact with Jesus.
The blood, sweat and tears on these threads are still — sorta — shrouded in mystery. New findings provide more evidence on what Jesus might have been buried in after he was crucified. A recent study ...
The Shroud of Turin is believed by many to be the burial cloth of Jesus, but radiocarbon dating in the 1980s suggested a ...
Turin Shroud may actually be Jesus’s burial cloth, new study suggests - Analysis places cloth’s orign in Christ’s time but ...
The imprint of a human-like figure on the Shroud of Turin may have come from a shallow sculpture and not an actual person, according to a new study that sheds more light on the world’s most ...
The shroud measuring 14ft by 3.6ft first emerged in the 1350s, bearing the faint image of a man that many believe to be the imprint of Jesus Christ. It displays the frontal and dorsal figures of ...
The imprint of a human-like figure on the Shroud of Turin may have come from a shallow sculpture and not an actual person, according to a new study that sheds more light on the world’s most ...