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Forensic Anthropology. Forensic Anthropology. Definition: An applied area of physical anthropology Role: To assist law enforcement agencies in a medico legal context. General Goals. 1. Establish biological profile: age, sex, race, height 2. Determine time since death
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Forensic Anthropology • Definition: An applied area of physical anthropology • Role: To assist law enforcement agencies in a medico legal context
General Goals • 1. Establish biological profile: age, sex, race, height • 2. Determine time since death • (PMI- post mortem interval) • 3. Examine remains for signs of trauma • 4. Establish positive identity
Who do they work with? • Police Departments • Sheriff’s Offices • Office of the Attorney General • Coroner’s offices • FBI • ATF • Private individuals
Estimating Age • Skull features • Dentition • Epiphysial fusion of long bones
Skull Features… • The cranium (the skull minus the lower jaw bone, or mandible) • consists of 28 bones. (6 unpaired bone, and 8 paired bones, plus 3 ear bones on each side) • Some bones are paired, which means there is a left and right one, and some bones are unpaired, meaning there is just one.
Neonate – Newborn = first 28 days after birth • The mandible is more commonly known as the lower jaw bone. • It is the strongest bone of the face • The mandible is two separate bones (left and right) that fuse together to form one bone.
DENTITION • Teeth can be divided into maxillary (upper) and mandibular (lower) • There are four different categories of teeth: incisors, canines, premolars, and molars. • Adults will usually have a total of 32 teeth. • The function of each tooth is different. Incisors are designed for cutting, canines are pointed for tearing, and premolars and molars are designed for grinding and reducing food.
The Hyoid • Small, horn-shaped bone that supports the tongue, and gives attachment to many muscles in speech. • This bone is of particular interest to forensic anthropologists as it is commonly broken in cases of strangulation. • Unfusedhyphoid. This fuses at about 35 years of age.
Long Bones • Humerus- your upper arm bone • Ulna/Radius - your lower arm bones • Femur – your thigh bone. It is the largest of all bones • Tibia & Fibula - two bones that make up your lower leg • tibia is known as the shin bone, and it is the second largest bone in the body
Humerus Radius & Ulna
FEMUR Fibula & Tibia
Determining Sex • Skull features • Pelvic Bone Characteristics • Analysis of Femur • Dentition A baby's skeleton has 350 bones, but many of these fuse to give an adult a total of 206 bones. A man's skeleton has broader shoulders than a woman's, a longer ribcage, and a pelvic girdle for walking/running. A woman's skeleton has the same bone complement as a man's but is slightly smaller and less robust, with a wider pelvic opening to assist childbirth.
Pelvic Bone Characteristics • The innominate bones are irregular in shape • AKA: Hip Bone • the large bone in the hip, consisting of the ilium, the ischium, and the pubic bone. • They are the best means of determining the SEX of a skeleton
FEMALE MALE
Analysis of the Femur • Typically longer in men • Women’s bones stop developing around 18 • Men’s bones develop until about 21 • Men have more bone mass
Determining Race • Caucasoid characteristics: Oval eye orbits, Narrow nasal opening • Negroid characteristics: square eye orbit, greater breadth at nose, protruding teeth • Mongoloid: in between the two. Native Americans have “shoveled” teeth. RACE IS THE HARDEST TO IDENTIFY
Determining Time Since Death • Decay of epidermis and/or skeleton • Articulation & scattering of remains • Material Remains?? • Clothing • Objects
Postmortem Interval - PMI • Antemortem trauma: Before death • Perimortem trauma: at or around the time of death • Post mortem trauma: after death Femur with animal chew marks on either end
Cause of Death • Can be homicide, suicide, accidental,natural, and unknown • Easier with a fleshed body and often very difficult with flesh and organs gone • Look for things like depressions andindentations caused by blunt trauma, lead fragments, etc.