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CENTER FOR HUMAN IDENTIFICATION LABORATORY OF FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGY Speaker Biography H. Gill-King, Ph.D., DABFA Ph.D. Physical Anthropology 1974 Institute for the Study of Earth and Man / Southern Methodist University Postdoctoral Study 1976-77 Skeletal Pathology / Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences University of Texas Southwestern Medical School Teaching Posts include – Southern Methodist University, Baylor College of Dentistry, University of Texas at Dallas, and currently at the University of North Texas and University of North Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Director of the Laboratory of Forensic Anthropology at UNT, and Co-Director, (with Dr. Arthur Eisenberg), of the Center for Human Identification Past Vice President of the American Board of Forensic Anthropology Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences Board certified Diplomat of the American Board of Forensic Anthropology Consultancies include - Texas DPS Aircraft Investigation Div. - Texas Rangers Cold Case Unit - Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (Senior Consultant and Trainer) - Federal Bureau of Investigation - U.S. Secret Service (Cybercrimes Unit) - Office of Naval Research and NCIS - Criminal Investigation Div. U.S. Army - U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration - Attorney General of Texas Division of Criminal Prosecution - Judicial Federal Police, DF Mexico - Servicio Periciale, DF Mexico - Oklahoma Indigent Defense Fund - National Aeronautics and Space Administration - Medical Examiners, Coroners, District and County Attorneys, Police and Sheriffs’ agencies throughout Texas and the Southwest First Responder / Human Identifications - Oklahoma City Bombing, - World Trade Event, - 2004 Shuttle Disaster PO Box 305220 ♦ Denton, Texas 76203-5220 ♦ (940) 565-4335 ♦ (800) 279-1339 ♦ Fax (940)369-8449 - Del Rio flood Numerous aircraft disasters Current Research - Human remains analysis at the Ft. St. Louis ruins, (La Salle Colony), Texas coast. - Thermo baric (explosive) effects on humans in small environments Forensic Anthropology and Human Remains Recovery Workshop A short course designed for individuals directly involved in the investigation and recovery of human remains. The course will familiarize participants with the scope of information provided to investigators by forensic anthropologists. Additional emphasis will be placed on teaching the techniques used in the location and recovery of buried human remains. This is a field based course that will involve participants conducting their own exhumations of simulated clandestine burials. Additional presentations will cover the use of DNA in unidentified human remains cases and its integration with forensic anthropology.