Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Human Remains Chapter 14 Forensic Science Forensic Pathology • Forensic Pathology: Determination of the cause and manner of death in cases of suspicious or unexplained death • Coroner: elected by the people; doesn’t need a medical degree to perform autopsies • Medical Examiner: must be a physician • Autopsy: to determine cause and manner of death; must have family’s permission • Medicolegal Autopsy: family has no say; occurs for sudden, unexpected, violent or suspicious deaths Cause and Manner of Death • Cause of Death: what killed the person (heart attack, car accident, gunshot, etc.) • Manner of Death: homicide, natural, suicide, accidental Autopsy Procedure • External Examination: – Establish age, sex, race, height, weight – Examine body in detail: tattoos, birth marks, moles, scars, clothing, trace evidence, hair, eyes, teeth – Determine degree of rigor mortis and decomposition – Photograph body and take fingerprints – Note wounds and trauma • Internal Examination: – – – – – – – – Remove clothing Make Y incision Collect samples of body fluids Remove and examine organs Trace outside wounds inwards Remove bullets Make microscope slides of body tissues X-ray body Patterns of Injury • Mechanical: gunshots, stabbings, strangulation • Thermal: extreme heat (hyperthermia) or extreme cold (hypothermia) • Electrical: electrical currents • Chemical: drugs, alcohol, carbon monoxide, poisons What are the patterns of injury? PMI (Post Mortem Interval) • Algor Mortis: – Tendency of the body to cool after death – It takes about 17 hours for a body to cool from normal temp of 37°C to room temp of 20°C. • Livor Mortis: – Pooling of blood at lowest part of the body – Changes from reddish to greenish to brown • Rigor Mortis: – Degree of stiffening of the body – 2-5 hours after death muscles contract – Rigor mortis disappears within 12-24 hours Chapter 11 Anthropology and Odontology Forensic Science Northfield High School Amy Urling Forensic Anthropologists • Collect skeletal remains at crime scenes • Identify skeletal remains • Report and interpret any evidence of trauma or injury apparent on the bones • Construct facial features over a skull (using clay or computer images) What Do Bones Tell Us About? • • • • • The age of an individual Nutritional history Health status Prior Injuries Patterns of muscle development Functions of Bones • Protect Internal organs • Provide anchors for muscle attachment • Facilitate muscle movement • Repository for minerals (such as calcium) Human Skeleton Human Skull A B C D H E I G F Bone Structure Compact Bone Structure Anatomical Terms • • • • • • • • Anterior: in front of Posterior: in back of Superior: above, closer to the head Inferior: below, closer to the foot Lateral: closer to the side Medial: closer to the midline Proximal: closer to the center of the body Distal: further from the center of the body Anatomical Term Practice • The skull is _________ to the pelvis superior/inferior • The nasal bone is ________ to the occipital bone anterior/posterior • The ulna is ________ to the sternum proximal/distal • The clavicle is ________ to the vertebrae lateral/medial