It's a pale yellow rectangle about 4.4m long and 1.1m wide, with two images of a man lying down, one face-up and one face-down almost meeting head-to-head in the middle. The images are almost the same colour as the cloth, just slightly darker. The images are flanked by two darker lines resembling scorches, and a symmetrical series of roughly triangular holes. One long side of the cloth has a thin (10cm) strip of the same material sewn along it, which has the effect of centralising the images. The whole cloth is sewn onto an off-white backing, and mounted in an aluminium frame, which can be raised and rotated.
There is a shroud of Turin? Is that what you mean?
No. The Shroud of Turin is an example of medieval technology. However, it required advanced technology to prove the Shroud to be a fake.
The scientists who have been doing studies and tests on the Shroud of Turin are Italian.
The Shroud of Turin is never displayed in museums but is kept locked in the Cathedral in Turin, Italy, and only displayed every few decades.
Not sure. What has the shroud been saying recently?
It is French for "The Shroud of Turin" - the purported burial shroud of Christ.
John H. Heller has written: 'Report on the Shroud of Turin' -- subject(s): Holy Shroud, Turiner Grabtuch 'Report of the Shroud of Turin'
The Shroud of Turin is kept safely in a chamber in Turin Italy. The Shroud is kept in a temperature-controlled environment in a vault to delay disintegration. It is seldom removed for inspection or testing .It may occasionally be observed in a hermetically sealed case.
because its nice
Jesus' body was wrapped in linen cloths before being placed in the tomb.
The Shroud of Turin was carbon dated with a probable creation date in the 14th century CE.
Yes. The French did fake the Shroud of Turin because we know Jesus was real as was his shroud. Modern scientists have found that it was from medival times because it was during that time that the French copied it.