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CHE 113
FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGY
A Very Brief Overview
Thanks to help from
Prof. Ann Bunch, SUNY Oswego
CHE 113 1
Forensic Anthropology
Brief Overview
•Defined as “the field of study that deals with the analysis
of human skeletal remains resulting from unexplained
deaths.”
•Often done in a legal context
•An applied science
•Five subdisciplines:
•1. Biological, or physical anthropology
•2. Archaeology
•3. Cultural anthropology
•4. Linguistics
•5. Applied anthropology
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Forensic Anthropology
Goal: Biological Profile
Includes:
1. General Description
2. Sex of decedent
3. Age of decedent
4. Ancestry of decedent
5. Stature of decedent
6. Assessment of trauma
(ante-, peri-, post mortem)
7. Pathologies noted
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Osteology: study of skeletal remains
Each bone studied INDIVIDUALLY
206 Skeletal Bones (total)
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Osteology: study of skeletal remains
Each bone studied INDIVIDUALLY
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Osteology
Human bone –vs- Animal bone
Macroscopic differences
Radiology
Observation
Measurement
Microscopic differences
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Osteology
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Osteology
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Macroscopic differences
Baboon femur
Human femurCHE 113 9
Microscopic differences
human
Spongy bone
mouse
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Osteology
Radiographs
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Information from skeletal remains
Sex of decedent
Skull
Hip bone
Femur
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Information from skeletal remains
Sex of decedent
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Information
from skeletal
remains
Sex of decedent
MALE OR FEMALE
SKELETON?
(a) IS FEMALE and
(b) IS MALE
Handout
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Male
Information
from skeletal
remains
Sex of decedent
MALE OR FEMALE
SKELETON?
(a) IS FEMALE and
(b) IS MALE
Female
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Information from skeletal remains
Sex of decedent
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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What can we learn from skeletons?
Age at Death
Hip bone most useful for adults
Estimate given as a range
(30 – 35 yrs old)
Teeth: Erupted or Not?
Epiphyses: fused or unfused?
Auricular surface
Pubic symphysis
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Age at Death
Long Bone Development
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Age at Death
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Age at Death
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Osteology
Teeth also studied
Deciduous –vs- Permanent
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Age at Death
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Epiphyses - A part of bone separated from the main
body of the bone by a layer of cartilage and
subsequently uniting with the bone through further
ossification
Unfused = juvenile
Fused = adult
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Spine
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More info from skeletal remains
ANCESTRY of decedent
Difficult determination to make
Facial bones most important
Nasal aperture
Teeth
Interorbital space
Mandible
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Stature estimate
Measure long bone(s) available
Plug in value to formula
Range established for stature of decedent
5’ 2” – 5’ 5”
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Other information
TRAUMA and PATHOLOGIES
Ante- mortem
Post-mortem
Peri-mortem
Gunshot
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Trauma
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Individual Identification
Person identified when it
was found that the amalgam
used in her dental
restorations was of a type
found only in specific areas
on the Eastern Coast of the
United States.
Habitual activity can wear away the
protective, cartilagenous lining which
reduces friction in joints. The humerus in
this photograph were in contact for many
years prior to this individual's death. The
surfaces are smooth and shiny, indicating
that the joint capsule and cartilage had worn
away, allowing bone on bone contact in the
cavity.
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Individual Identification
Dental implants, braces, and
other types of dental work
are often recovered with a
body and are extremely
useful in identification
because they are so unique
to the individual and are
well detailed in antemortem
radiographs and medical
records.
Healed fracture on the sternal end of a
midthoracic rib. The area within the red
brackets is the site of injury. Note the more
porous appearance of the bone in this area this is woven bone.
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/kw/osteo/forensics/sasta.html
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Case Study
From Prof. Ann Bunch
SUNY Oswego
September 1999 Tourist Aircraft Crash on the Big Island of Hawaii
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
Piper Aircraft with 9 passengers, 1 pilot
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
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Aircraft’s path prior to crash & location of crash
Big Island Aircraft Crash
NTSB determination of cause = pilot error
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
Document remains
present
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
X-ray all remains/
Possible remains
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
Personal effects and
identification
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
Identification “by
exclusion”
Osteoarthritis
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
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Big Island Aircraft Crash
Sorting out commingling
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Other Types of Evidence
Wreckage fragments
Wreckage in situ
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Federal Government Cases
From Prof. Ann Bunch
SUNY Oswego
Ha Tay Province, Socialist Republic of Vietnam
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1995-1996 Recovery Mission
1972 B-52 Crash Site
Christmas Bombing of Hanoi, Operation “Rolling CHE
Thunder”
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Witness interviews
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1972 B-52 Crash Site
Pond after draining
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B-52 Crash Site
Surrounding terrain
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The “Bottomless Pit”
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Wet-screening stations
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Wet-screening stations in operation
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Progress after one field activity
Test Pit
Test Pit
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6 weeks’ progress
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6 weeks’ progress
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Recovery continues
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Focal point of recovery
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Evidence
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Final View of Excavation
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More Evidence
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More evidence
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Case Status
•Remains of tail gunner identified with mtDNA
•Captain’s rank insignia recovered from site =
presence of second MIA?
•Family of tail gunner not willing to accept ID
until more solid evidence of other MIA is
found/presented
Prof. Ann Bunch, SUNY Oswego
CHE 113 62
Harper Bone/Kennedy
Found the day after the
assassination 25 ft. from the
car path in the Plaza.
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Believed to be a
parietal bone
mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ harper.htm
CHE 113 63
Harper Bone/Kennedy
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Believed to be a
parietal bone
mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ harper.htm
CHE 113 64
Harper Bone
- Kennedy
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
CHE 113 65
Forensic Anthropology
• http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind
/forensics/anthropology/1.html
• http://www.forensicanthro.com/
• http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/biology/for
ensics/index.shtml
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Forensic Anthropology
Conclusions and Summary
1. General Description
2. Sex of decedent
3. Age of decedent
4. Ancestry of decedent
5. Stature of decedent
6. Assessment of trauma
(ante-, peri-, post mortem)
7. Pathologies noted
Exclusionary and identification evidence
Class and individual evidence
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