News

The details of Moraes’ findings have been published in an article for Archaeometry, including acknowledgements of all of the ...
The imprint of a human-like figure on the Shroud of Turin may have come from a shallow sculpture and not an actual person, ...
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 Vatican has never officially pronounced on the shroud’s authenticity, though popes have held it up as an object of ...
The mysterious Shroud of Turin, which is believed by Christians to have laid atop Jesus Christ's body, may be even stranger ...
A 3D analysis comparing how fabric falls on a human body compared to a low-relief sculpture suggests the technique behind the ...
The Shroud of Turin, believed by some to be the burial cloth of Jesus, has been subjected to extensive testing over the years ...
A recent study suggests the Shroud of Turin may be a medieval artwork rather than an imprint of Jesus' body. Using digital ...
The Shroud of Turin is shrouded in mystery. Viewed as a holy relic for centuries, this artifact is not what it looks like according to yet another study. The old linen cloth and its faint spectral ...
This is where a group known as the Shroud of Turin Research Project (or STURP) comes into play. The team includes more than a dozen physicists, chemists, photographers, and other researchers.
Interest in the Turin Shroud was born, by chance, during a 2016 conference where I met Giulio Fanti, professor at Padua University, who was presenting the results of his long-lasting study.