I have used scientific dating to pinpoint the day Daniel's
"time-oriented" prophecy began and the day Rome set fire
to the temple. The left and right side of the chart below, marked
with dashed lines, show these dates. Scientific dating affixes
limits to Daniel's "time-oriented" prophecy and
shows that 187,880 days passed from the start of the prophecy to the
destruction of the temple.

The middle of the summary above shows the date Jesus entered
Jerusalem before his crucifixion. Pinpointing the date on which
Jesus rode into Jerusalem is pivotal since it reveals that 14,000
days appear to be hidden in Daniel's linear prophecy.
How can I verify that Jesus' crucifixion happened in AD 32?
Calculating the date of the crucifixion requires astronomy,
secular references, and the Bible. I will use a method similar to
how I pinpointed the day Rome set fire to the temple in AD 70. For
instance, I pinpointed the temple's destruction on August 5, AD 70,
because I knew the day of the week (Sunday), the year (AD 70), and
the 50 day time length from the temple's destruction to the Jewish
New Year.
The scientific portion of dating Christ's crucifixion determines
that Jesus had to be crucified in either 31, 32, or 33 AD (Click on
the "Year of Crucifixion" below). After showing the only
possible years for the crucifixion were 31 to 33 AD, the linear
study reveals that Christ entered Jerusalem on April 6, AD 32 (Click
on the "Linear Research" below).
To sum up this analysis, scientific dating isolates the years AD
31, 32, or 33 as viable crucifixion years. In turn, a literal
interpretation of biblical literature pinpoints April 6, AD 32 as
the end of Daniel's 69th week. This approach to Scripture isolates
14,000 days from Jesus' entry into Jerusalem as the Messiah to the
destruction of the temple, revealing that history appears to be
designed and controlled by a Supreme Being.

Finally, the following icons will show how the moon's orbit about
the earth isolates the AD 32 date based on the biblical scenario for
the crucifixion.