DNA testing on the Shroud of Turin
Dr. Victor Tyron and his wife, Nancy Mitchell Tyron of Texas University's Center for Advanced DNA Technologies, performed an independent test for DNA and established that the threads contained human blood.
The State University of New York could not confirm any DNA claims because the blood appears to be so old that the DNA is badly fragmented and concluded that proper analysis is doubtful.
A characteristic of the cloth blood stains is perhaps the more religiously significant portion of the image and of the debate.
Christians believe Jesus bled and died as a sacrifice for mankind's sins. That offering is remembered during religious services today in most faiths. In many, wine or liquid taken during sacrament services is blessed and taken as a representation of Christ's blood or is said to literally become Christ's blood when followers drink it.
But STURP members offered the biological explanation that if the man of the shroud had undergone torture, scourging, crucifixion and shock, then in less than 30 seconds, a high amount of yellowish-orange bilirubin would have been produced.
Recent comments
If the stains are confirmed to actually be blood stains,I challenge...
M. Better | April 28, 2008 at 1:27 p.m.


