To: madconservative
The black and white scans are not both Terri's. Only the one on the right.
27 posted on
03/29/2005 10:11:23 PM PST by
texasflower
("America's vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one." President George W. Bush 01/20/05)
To: texasflower
The black and white scans are not both Terri's. Only the one on the right. That doesn't answer the question of why the skull seems thicker in the scan on the right than in the one on the left.
34 posted on
03/29/2005 10:14:32 PM PST by
supercat
("Though her life has been sold for corrupt men's gold, she refuses to give up the ghost.")
To: texasflower
The black and white scans are not both Terri's. Only the one on the right.
The scan speaks for itself.
To: texasflower
That is precisely my point. The one on the right looks like it is a cross section taken on a much higher plane of the skull, making the comparison to a normal scan not (pardon the cliche) "apples to apples". The scan on the right appears to be lower because the skull appears thicker (like I said before it is just a hunch, but its based on a whole lot of technical drawing). As you would make cross-sections of the skull moving up, eventually the skull would appear thicker because you are "slicing into the skull at an angle, rather than perpendicularly.
Incidentally, the thickness post 16 looks comparable in thickness but who even knows if these heads are of comparible size...
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