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And the chart has been a contentious item over the years and it's often been claimed to be the original very off-covering piece. And it could not have been created on a three-dimensional human body. There's a new study that's put out findings about this. And it's very likely that the image is an imprint of a low-release sculpture. And this is according to a graphics expert. This is repeater station Kilo 4. There was a study published on July 28 in the journal Archaeometry. And there was a Brazilian, a 3D digital designer, who specializes in historical facial reconstruction. He uses modeling software to compare how cloth drapes over a human body versus how drapes over low-release sculptures. And the image of the shrouded term is more consistent with a low-release matrix. This matrix could have been made of wood, stone, metal, and pigmented, or even heated, only in the areas of contact, producing this observed pattern. And the shoot was first recorded in the late 14th century. And controversy over whether it was an authentic relic from the crucifixion and death of Jesus started almost immediately. And carbon dating analysis carried out in 1989 placed the shroud's creation in around 1260 AD to 1390 AD. So that kind of solidifies its interpretation as an evil artifact. So during that time in European history, low-release depictions of religious figures were widely used. Previous art historians have already found that to be true. So unless we need how the shroud of term might have been made, the additional models were made. The first model represented a three-dimensional human body, and the second model was a low-release representation of a human body, so a sculpture. Using 3D simulation tools on virtually draped fabric, the two different body models were used in this case. So when comparing the virtual fabric to the photographs of the shroud taken in 1931, it was found that the fabric from the low-release model almost exactly matched the photograph. In the simulation with the three-dimensional body, the fabric deformed around the body resulting in a swollen distorted image.

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