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Forensic Medicine of the Lower Extremity || Estimating Age at Death

✍ Scribed by Rich, Jeremy; Dean, Dorothy E.; Powers, Robert H.


Book ID
118038546
Publisher
Humana Press
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
407 KB
Edition
2005
Category
Article
ISBN
1592598978

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Publius Syrus stated back in 42 B.C., β€œYou cannot put the same shoe on every foot.” (Maxim 596) Though written long before the advent of forensic science, Syrus’ maxim summarizes the theme of Forensic Medicine of the Lower Extremity: Human Identification and Trauma Analysis of the Thigh, Leg, and Foot. Put simply, the lower extremity is a tremendously variable anatomic region. This variation is beneficial to forensic experts. Differences in the leg and foot can be used to establish individual identity. Analysis of damage to the lower limb can be used to reconstruct antemortem, perimortem, and postmortem trauma. As a forensic anthropologist, I analyze cases involving decomposed, burned, m- mified, mutilated, and skeletal remains. Many of the corpses I examine are incomplete. Occasionally, I receive nothing but the legs and feet; a lower torso dragged from a river; a foot recovered in a city park; dismembered drug dealers in plastic bags; victims of bombings and airline disasters; and the dead commingled in common graves. Though the leg and foot contain much that is useful in forensic analysis, before this publication, investigators faced a twofold problem. Little research that focused on the lower extremity was available in the literature, and the existing research was published in diverse sources, making its location and synthesis a daunting task.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Revisions in the microscopic method of e
✍ Ellis R. Kerley; Douglas H. Ubelaker πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1978 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 136 KB πŸ‘ 3 views

## Abstract Problems recently discovered in the Kerley method of estimating age at death from cortical microstructure are discussed. Kerley's original data have been re‐analyzed to produce new regression equations and to document the original field size.