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'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing
Documenting Reality True Crime Related Chat & Research Interesting People, Places, Things, Animals 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing

'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing 

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  #1  
08-09-2013, 12:42 AM
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'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing

Alan Boyle, Science Editor,
NBC News
8 hours ago

Louvre Museum

Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa masterpiece, photo below, is thought to have been inspired by a woman named Lisa Gherardini, the wife of a merchant who was one of Leonardo's patrons. Researchers say they're opening up a Florentine family tomb for the first time in centuries as part of their long-running effort to identify the bones of a woman who is thought to be the model for Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa portrait.

DNA testing of bones inside the tomb, in the Martyrs' Crypt behind the main altar of Florence's Basilica della Santissima Annuziata, could confirm that researchers have found the remains of Lisa Gherardini Del Giocondo, a merchant's wife who lived across the street from Leonardo.

The current consensus among art experts is that Lisa Gherardini inspired the artist's 16th-century painting of the woman with the enigmatic smile, which now hangs in the Louvre in Paris.

Linking Lisa to Her Family

Last year, excavators unearthed several skeletons in the basement of a former Ursuline convent in Florence, where Lisa Gherardini is said to have been buried. But they aren't yet certain which one of the skeletons, if any, is associated with the presumed Mona Lisa model.

"Right now we are carrying out carbon-14 tests on three of the eight skeletons found in St. Ursula, which could be the age Lisa Gherardini was when she died," Silvano Vinceti, who heads Italy's national committee for cultural heritage, told the ANSA news agency. "The carbon-14 test will tell us which of the three dates back to the 1500s. Only then will we know which skeleton to do the final DNA test on."

That DNA analysis is only half of the job, however. Vinceti and his colleagues also need to confirm the family connection by checking DNA from the remains of Gherardini's two sons. That's why the team plans to take samples from the Gherardini family tomb in the basilica — where the sons and the father, Florentine cloth merchant Francesco Del Giocondo, are buried. ANSA reported that the tomb is to be opened on Friday for the first time in 300 years.

The working scenario for the genesis of the Mona Lisa is that Francesco commissioned the portrait to celebrate Lisa's pregnancy, or the birth of their second child in 1502, or the purchase of a house in 1503. After Francesco's death, Lisa became a nun. She died in 1542 at the age of 63, and was said to be buried near the convent's altar. Such burials were common in those days, which is why the researchers want to make sure they have the right bones.

Reconstructing the Face

If the research team verifies a family connection to one of the skeletons from the convent, Vinceti plans to commission a virtual reconstruction of Lisa Gherardini's face, based on the bone structure, and compare it to Leonardo's version.

Scientists have proposed a number of hypotheses for Mona Lisa's smile — ranging from bad teeth to congenital palsy. It’s conceivable that forensic tests on the remains could shed new light on the science behind the smile.

Kristina Killgrove, a bioarchaeologist at the University of West Florida, says Vinceti and his colleagues appear to be "undertaking the excavation professionally" — but she wonders how serious they are about the science, and whether the facial reconstruction will have any basis in reality.

"This will probably bring in some tourist dollars, but other than confirming that this is the Mona Lisa, I don't see any scholarly relevance to it," Killgrove told NBC News. "They could figure out her diet. They could figure out if she had any old injuries or pathological conditions. But I've never seen anything written up about that. And these bones, as far as I can tell from the pictures, are in fairly poor condition."

More about Mona Lisa:

•Video: Did Leonardo create an earlier Mona Lisa?http://www.nbcnews.com/video/nightly...03206#49203206

•Mona Lisa speaks from the grave ... virtuallyhttp://www.nbcnews.com/id/13065968/ns/technology_and_science-science/t/mona-lisa-speaks-virtually/

•Is the Mona Lisa actually ... Leonardo da Vinci?http://www.nbcnews.com/id/35134994/n.../did-leonardo-
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  #2  
08-09-2013, 11:06 PM
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Re: 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing

Awesome....If only i had a time machine, I would not rewrite history i would spell it out in color and audio.....
  #3  
08-10-2013, 04:56 PM
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Re: 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing

FUUUUTUUUUURRRRRE
  #4  
08-10-2013, 05:06 PM
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Re: 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing

Clearly its a da Vinci painting. The face and fear of floods. However I don't think Mona Lisa was a real person.
Documenting Reality True Crime Related Chat & Research Interesting People, Places, Things, Animals 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing
Documenting Reality True Crime Related Chat & Research Interesting People, Places, Things, Animals 'Mona Lisa' Skeleton & Her Kins' Remains Are Due for DNA Testing


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