
Flutterbywingz
Taking Flight
offline
Registered: Jul 2004
Local time: 05:17 PM
Location:
Posts: 2345
|
| quote: |
Copernicus Comes to Life
A police laboratory in Warsaw used a recovered skull to make a virtual reconstruction of this man's face, thought to be Copernicus.
AFP
Nov. 7, 2005 — Human remains excavated in a cathedral in northern Poland are very likely those of the Renaissance astronomer Nicolas Copernicus, archaeologists working in the cathedral said Thursday.
The remains of a 70-year-old man were dug up near the altar of the cathedral in Frombork, where Copernicus held the office of canon.
A police laboratory in Warsaw used the skull to make a virtual reconstruction of the man's face which resembled portraits of Copernicus, a key figure in the scientific revolution of the 17th century with his heliocentric theory of the solar system.
Archaeologists said a scar on Copernicus' head visible in a portrait corresponded to a mark near the eyebrow on the skull.
"It is very likely that it is the skull of Nicolas Copernicus," said Jerzy Gassowski of the Institute of Anthropology and Archaeology in the central Polish town of Pulutsk, who is directing excavations in the cathedral.
"Our starting theory, according to which canons were buried at the time near the altar of their church, has been confirmed," Gassowski said on Polish television.
Copernicus, who lived from 1473 to 1543, developed the heliocentric theory which took account of the orbit of planets round the sun.
His best known work, On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, was published a few days before his death and in 1616 was condemned by Pope Paul V as being contrary to the Biblical Scriptures. |
Interesting. Osteology has many possibilities.
|