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Geologist rebuts claim of forged Jesus inscription on ossuary
Ha'aretz ^ | Sun., December 21, 2003 | By Amiram Barkat, Haaretz Correspondent and AP

Posted on 12/21/2003 5:31:47 AM PST by Phil V.

w w w . h a a r e t z d a i l y . c o m

Last update - 09:47 21/12/2003

Geologist rebuts claim of forged Jesus inscription on ossuary

By Amiram Barkat, Haaretz Correspondent and AP


The disputed ossuary.
(Israel Antiquities Authority)

The heated controversy over the authenticity of the inscription naming Jesus on an ancient burial box discovered a year ago has flared up again, after claims by an American geologist that the Israeli findings, dismissing the inscription on a small 2,000-year-old limestone ossuary as a forgery, were flawed.

James Harrell published his opinion Friday in the Biblical Archaeology Review (BAR).

Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) Director-General Shuka Dorfman says "we would be happy if someone proves these findings are real. At present, as far as we know, they are a total forgery."

Israeli archaeologists say the article is part of a systematic mud-slinging campaign the BAR editor is waging against the IAA.

The discovery of the beige chest caused a stir a year ago because of its inscription: "James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus."

If it was indeed the container that held the remains of James, and it referred to Jesus of Nazareth, it would be the oldest physical link ever found between the modern world and Jesus. According to biblical accounts, Jesus' brother James led the early church in Jerusalem and was stoned to death as a Jewish heretic in A.D. 62.

The IAA appointed two teams of experts to examine the ossuary. In June the experts declared the inscription a fake, though the box itself dated back to the first century, a time when burial in stone boxes was a widespread Jewish custom in Jerusalem.

Israeli researchers said the main clue that the inscription was phony was that its letters had been cut through a soft gray residue that could not have built up naturally with age and thus was most likely a homemade paste smeared over the inscription to make it appear old.

The IAA report undermined the credibility of the popular American bi-monthly BAR, which had been first to disclose the ossuary's discovery.

Even before publishing the article about the ossuary's discovery, BAR editor Hershel Shanks acted to get the ossuary out of Israel and put it on display in a museum in Toronto, Canada.

At the end of the exhibition, visited by more than 100,000 paying viewers, Shanks planned to exhibit the ossuary in a series of U.S. museums. But his plans were thwarted when IAA director Dorfman refused to extend the permit for taking the ossuary out of Israel.

"I simply could not believe it happened," Shanks said Saturday. "I begged Dorfman. It could have been such a great thing for Israel. Even now, after the IAA announced it a fake, there is still a demand for the ossuary," he said.

"Why does Dorfman hate me so much?" he asked his readers, offering a $100 prize to anyone who finds the answer. In a previous BAR edition, Shanks published an article by Andre Lemaire, an expert of ancient scripts from the Sorbonne Unviversity of Paris.

Lemaire lists several flaws in the IAA report, adding that the writers displayed a lack of sensitivity to Christian feelings, by underestimating the finding's importance and by even joking, in one case, at Jesus' expense.

Shanks concedes "there were some very unsuccessful expressions toward Christians' feelings in the report, but the religious identity of the writers is totally irrelevant." He believes, however, that the findings should be re-examined by an international independent experts' committee.

Shanks confirms he was the one to suggest Harrell write the article attacking the report. But you don't have to be a scientist to find questionable statements in the report, he says.

Harrell, a geologist at the University of Toledo and a member of the Association for the Study of Marble and Other Stones in Antiquity, did not examine the ossuary, but only the IAA report. The flaws he claims he found are in the geological chapter written by Professor Yuval Goren of Tel Aviv University and Dr. Avner Ayalon of the Geological Institute. The two establish that the stone residue around the inscription is of a different texture than the residue around the rest of the ossuary's surface.

They conclude the residue around the inscription was not formed from a natural aging process but was prepared by modern methods. Goren assumes the composition was formed by dissolving substances in boiling water. Harrell claims that the substances Goren mentions are not soluble in boiling water.

Harrell also claims the researchers did not examine the possibility that the texture difference might have been created by cleaning the inscription with chemical materials. The ossuary's owner, collector Oded Golan, said he remembered his mother cleaning the inscription on one occasion.




TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: archaeology; bar; bible; christ; christianity; economic; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; israel; james; ossuary; shanks; wwjd

1 posted on 12/21/2003 5:31:48 AM PST by Phil V.
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To: Phil V.
I get BAR and although this is a re-hash of the ongoing disputes, there is ALOT more to this story than is in the popular press. Like many important issues in the scientific world, politics and pre-planned positions play a larger than life role in this controversy.

Don't put this one away yet folks - IMHO there are many more things to be looked at regarding the ossuary.
2 posted on 12/21/2003 8:00:59 AM PST by txzman (Jer 23:29)
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To: txzman; SJackson
Would please give this thread a BUMP, Mr. Jackson?

Thanks in advance

3 posted on 12/21/2003 9:00:02 AM PST by Phil V.
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To: Phil V.
True lies.
One of the central themes of "Crack in the Cosmic Egg," a new age mystic book from the seventies, was that what we discover is dictated by what we want to find. We create reality by wishing it so. Of course, the fate of alchemy refutes this neatly, but, hey, it sounds to groovy to say.... "I love the Mommas and the Papas, and the..," oops. Sorry.

Anyway, the ossuary Jesus inscription is a phony as proved by the patina. All else is Magical realism, aka, true lies, aka, wishful thinking.
4 posted on 12/21/2003 9:41:01 AM PST by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
5 posted on 12/21/2003 11:11:54 AM PST by SJackson
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: gcruse
I like you alot but I disagree with you on this. Some archaeologists do try to prove an artifact is something it is not however, you can always tell when there is an important find because the experts will argue their points for years and all to often, they make it personal instead of dealing with just the facts. I am not into new age msystic stuff but I do have a large carton of artifacts in my house just waiting to be cleaned and identified and I can always use expert help....but none of it has a patina
7 posted on 12/21/2003 3:12:40 PM PST by ruoflaw
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Flawed Geochemistry Used to Condemn James Inscription
by James A. Harrell
...It is clear from the statements of IAA committee members that they were strongly influenced by Ayalon's conclusions. This is unfortunate because there are three serious flaws in his reasoning:

First, ground calcite will not dissolve in hot water.

Second, undissolved calcite immersed in hot water will not exchange oxygen isotopes with the water and so will not have a d18O value reflecting the water's temperature.

Third, heating calcite in an oven will not change its d18O value.

Ayalon's interpretation is therefore based on flawed chemistry.

For Ayalon's hot-water scheme to work, the limestone would have to be dissolved in a hot acid-water solution and then the calcite crystallized by evaporating the solution. However, a coating made in this way would have an acid residue and so give away its origin. To test for this possibility, the inscription coating needs to be chemically analyzed, but this has not yet been done... The inscription coating also may not be pure calcite. The conclusion to be drawn from Ayalon's misinterpretation of his own data is that something else is causing the inscription coating to have very negative d18O values... One other point: Ayalon dismisses out of hand the one sample of inscription coating whose d18O value fell within the range of the ancient patina. He disregards this result because he attributes it to an accidental mixing of the ossuary limestone (with a d18O of +1 to –2) and the inscription coating, resulting in an intermediate d18O value. He may be correct in this, but he is showing his bias by not allowing for the other possibility: that the word Jesus (where the sample came from) is truly ancient... For the moment, all we can say is that the oxygen isotope results are equally consistent with two possible interpretations:

1. The inscription is a modern forgery that was coated with a faked patina; OR

2. The inscription is ancient but was cleaned in modern times with the coating produced either inadvertently as a result of cleaning or intentionally to disguise the cleaning.
Scholars say Jesus box may be genuine
Scientists say that this box dates from A.D. 63.

The Associated Press
Panelists, speaking in Atlanta at the annual joint conference of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature on Sunday, said authorities should examine the box more closely before passing judgment... James Harrell, a geologist at the University of Toledo and member of the Association for the Study of Marble and Other Stones in Antiquity, said his analysis of the inscription suggests the missing patina could simply be the result of overcleaning -- not forgery... Oded Golan, the collector who came forward with the ossuary in October 2002 and has since been accused of being the forger, said it had been "undoubtedly cleaned" while in his family's possession but did not know how. Panelists said that while oxygen isotope analysis found most of the inscription showed some sort of modern influence, the last part of it was consistent with the ancient patina -- specifically the part that names Jesus.
Internet Rumor Proves Groundless
by Hershel Shanks
Eric Meyers, a prominent archaeologist and former president of the American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR)... has posted an article on the internet entitled, "Well-known Israeli Archaeologist Casts More Doubt on Authenticity of James Ossuary." The Israeli archaeologist is not Meyers, who is American, but a source unnamed in the article who claims he "spotted [the ossuary] in a dealer's shop [in the mid-1990's] lacking the 'brother of Jesus' element in the inscription," as the subhead on Meyers' article reads... Meyers reports that "Sometime in 2001 my [unnamed] source [you will learn his name in the March/April 2004 BAR] alleges that [Oded] Golan through his lawyers offered for sale to The International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, the so-called James Ossuary, now in its revised and expanded form, for a sum of $2 million." That is, since it was seen in the mid-1990s without "the brother of Jesus," by 2001 it had acquired that addition... In receipt of such damning evidence, one would think that Meyers would do a little checking before placing this kind of charge on the internet. He could have at least called the International Christian Embassy to verify an unnamed source... Malcolm Hedding, the executive director of the International Christian Embassy, checked his records and found that he had been visited at 11:00 in the morning on November 28, 2002 [not 2001] by a man named Uri Ovnat, whose business card identified him, not as a lawyer, but as director of the International Marketing Development Enterprises, Ltd. in Ramat haSharon, Israel... In other words, the visit occurred not in 2001, before Lemaire had seen the ossuary, but after Lemaire's BAR article appeared in late October 2002... Uri Ovnat visited the International Christian Embassy with the magazine and a proposal that the Christian Embassy buy the ossuary, urging that this would be a major attraction for tourists. Hedding says that this is not the kind of thing the Christian Embassy does, and that was the end of it. Ovnat says no price was ever mentioned. Nor did Ovnat and Golan ever mention price, according to Ovnat. Hedding says his recollection is that a price of $2 million was mentioned by Ovnat. Ovnat says he did not approach anyone else... [W]e should not rush into print with unsourced rumors in an effort to denigrate Oded Golan. At least get the facts straight.
see also James Bone Box Updates on the BAR website.
Archaeology Odyssey Archaeology Odyssey
from Biblical Archaeology Review
Try the New and Improved SCF Index

8 posted on 02/10/2004 11:49:44 AM PST by SunkenCiv (the ossuary was condemned as "impossible" and "too perfect" by the True Believers)
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Flawed Geochemistry Used to Condemn James Inscription
by James A. Harrell
...It is clear from the statements of IAA committee members that they were strongly influenced by Ayalon's conclusions. This is unfortunate because there are three serious flaws in his reasoning:

First, ground calcite will not dissolve in hot water.

Second, undissolved calcite immersed in hot water will not exchange oxygen isotopes with the water and so will not have a d18O value reflecting the water's temperature.

Third, heating calcite in an oven will not change its d18O value.

Ayalon's interpretation is therefore based on flawed chemistry.

For Ayalon's hot-water scheme to work, the limestone would have to be dissolved in a hot acid-water solution and then the calcite crystallized by evaporating the solution. However, a coating made in this way would have an acid residue and so give away its origin. To test for this possibility, the inscription coating needs to be chemically analyzed, but this has not yet been done... The inscription coating also may not be pure calcite. The conclusion to be drawn from Ayalon's misinterpretation of his own data is that something else is causing the inscription coating to have very negative d18O values... One other point: Ayalon dismisses out of hand the one sample of inscription coating whose d18O value fell within the range of the ancient patina. He disregards this result because he attributes it to an accidental mixing of the ossuary limestone (with a d18O of +1 to –2) and the inscription coating, resulting in an intermediate d18O value. He may be correct in this, but he is showing his bias by not allowing for the other possibility: that the word Jesus (where the sample came from) is truly ancient... For the moment, all we can say is that the oxygen isotope results are equally consistent with two possible interpretations:

1. The inscription is a modern forgery that was coated with a faked patina; OR

2. The inscription is ancient but was cleaned in modern times with the coating produced either inadvertently as a result of cleaning or intentionally to disguise the cleaning.
Scholars say Jesus box may be genuine
Scientists say that this box dates from A.D. 63.

The Associated Press
Panelists, speaking in Atlanta at the annual joint conference of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature on Sunday, said authorities should examine the box more closely before passing judgment... James Harrell, a geologist at the University of Toledo and member of the Association for the Study of Marble and Other Stones in Antiquity, said his analysis of the inscription suggests the missing patina could simply be the result of overcleaning -- not forgery... Oded Golan, the collector who came forward with the ossuary in October 2002 and has since been accused of being the forger, said it had been "undoubtedly cleaned" while in his family's possession but did not know how. Panelists said that while oxygen isotope analysis found most of the inscription showed some sort of modern influence, the last part of it was consistent with the ancient patina -- specifically the part that names Jesus.
Internet Rumor Proves Groundless
by Hershel Shanks
Eric Meyers, a prominent archaeologist and former president of the American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR)... has posted an article on the internet entitled, "Well-known Israeli Archaeologist Casts More Doubt on Authenticity of James Ossuary." The Israeli archaeologist is not Meyers, who is American, but a source unnamed in the article who claims he "spotted [the ossuary] in a dealer's shop [in the mid-1990's] lacking the 'brother of Jesus' element in the inscription," as the subhead on Meyers' article reads... Meyers reports that "Sometime in 2001 my [unnamed] source [you will learn his name in the March/April 2004 BAR] alleges that [Oded] Golan through his lawyers offered for sale to The International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, the so-called James Ossuary, now in its revised and expanded form, for a sum of $2 million." That is, since it was seen in the mid-1990s without "the brother of Jesus," by 2001 it had acquired that addition... In receipt of such damning evidence, one would think that Meyers would do a little checking before placing this kind of charge on the internet. He could have at least called the International Christian Embassy to verify an unnamed source... Malcolm Hedding, the executive director of the International Christian Embassy, checked his records and found that he had been visited at 11:00 in the morning on November 28, 2002 [not 2001] by a man named Uri Ovnat, whose business card identified him, not as a lawyer, but as director of the International Marketing Development Enterprises, Ltd. in Ramat haSharon, Israel... In other words, the visit occurred not in 2001, before Lemaire had seen the ossuary, but after Lemaire's BAR article appeared in late October 2002... Uri Ovnat visited the International Christian Embassy with the magazine and a proposal that the Christian Embassy buy the ossuary, urging that this would be a major attraction for tourists. Hedding says that this is not the kind of thing the Christian Embassy does, and that was the end of it. Ovnat says no price was ever mentioned. Nor did Ovnat and Golan ever mention price, according to Ovnat. Hedding says his recollection is that a price of $2 million was mentioned by Ovnat. Ovnat says he did not approach anyone else... [W]e should not rush into print with unsourced rumors in an effort to denigrate Oded Golan. At least get the facts straight.
see also James Bone Box Updates on the BAR website.
Archaeology Odyssey Archaeology Odyssey
from Biblical Archaeology Review

9 posted on 02/10/2004 11:50:18 AM PST by SunkenCiv (the ossuary was condemned as "impossible" and "too perfect" by the True Believers)
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To: Phil V.; *Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Just adding this to the GGG homepage, not sending a general distribution.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the "Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list --
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10 posted on 07/24/2004 2:37:53 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
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Just updating the GGG information, not sending a general distribution.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
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11 posted on 02/19/2007 8:01:19 PM PST by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Thursday, February 19, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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12 posted on 11/28/2009 9:06:48 AM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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