ROME (Reuters) - An Italian scientist says he has reproduced the Envelop of Turin, a deed that he says proves definitively that the linen some Christians esteem as Jesus Christ's burial textile is a medieval fake.
The grave-clothes, measuring 14 feet, 4 inches through 3 feet, 7 inches bears the simulacrum, eerily reversed like a realistic negative, of a crucified people some believers explain is Christ.
"We own shown that is practical to reproduce something which has the selfsame characteristics as the Mantle," Luigi Garlaschelli, who is charges to embellish the results at a convention on the para-normal this weekend in northern Italy, said on Monday.
A professor of organic chemistry at the University of Pavia, Garlaschelli made convenient to Reuters the paper he ordain deliver and the accompanying comparative photographs.
The Swathe of Turin shows the distant and face of a bearded darbies with prolonged hair, his arms crossed on his caddy, while the inviolate stuff the clergy is significant nearby what appears to be rivulets of blood from wounds in the wrists, feet and side. Read more on Yahoo News.
The grave-clothes, measuring 14 feet, 4 inches through 3 feet, 7 inches bears the simulacrum, eerily reversed like a realistic negative, of a crucified people some believers explain is Christ.
"We own shown that is practical to reproduce something which has the selfsame characteristics as the Mantle," Luigi Garlaschelli, who is charges to embellish the results at a convention on the para-normal this weekend in northern Italy, said on Monday.
A professor of organic chemistry at the University of Pavia, Garlaschelli made convenient to Reuters the paper he ordain deliver and the accompanying comparative photographs.
The Swathe of Turin shows the distant and face of a bearded darbies with prolonged hair, his arms crossed on his caddy, while the inviolate stuff the clergy is significant nearby what appears to be rivulets of blood from wounds in the wrists, feet and side. Read more on Yahoo News.



