Volume 64, Issue 1 p. 137-143
Paper

A BPA Approach to the Shroud of Turin

Matteo Borrini Ph.D.

Corresponding Author

Matteo Borrini Ph.D.

School of Natural Sciences and Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Byrom Street, Liverpool, U.K.

Corresponding author: Matteo Borrini, Ph.D. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Luigi Garlaschelli M.Sc.

Luigi Garlaschelli M.Sc.

CICAP – Italian Committee for the Investigation of Claims of the Pseudosciences, via Pascoli, 1, 35125 Padova, Italy

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First published: 10 July 2018
Citations: 9
Presented at the 66th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, February 17-22, 2014, in Seattle, WA; and the 67th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, February 16-21, 2015, in Orlando, FL.

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Abstract

An investigation into the arm and body position required to obtain the blood pattern visible in the image of the Shroud of Turin was performed using a living volunteer. The two short rivulets on the back of the left hand of the Shroud are only consistent with a standing subject with arms at a ca 45° angle. This angle is different from that necessary for the forearm stains, which require nearly vertical arms for a standing subject. The BPA of blood visible on the frontal side of the chest (the lance wound) shows that the Shroud represents the bleeding in a realistic manner for a standing position while the stains at the back—of a supposed postmortem bleeding from the same wound for a supine corpse—are totally unrealistic. Simulation of bleeding from the nail wounds contacting wood surfaces yielded unclear results.

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