Term
True or False: A scanner replaces having to do photographs |
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Definition
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Term
What is a validation scale? |
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Definition
Placing something of a known length in a scan for reference and to validated measurements within a scan. |
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Term
What are 3 types of validation scales? |
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Definition
Scale bar, pocket rod (tape measure), yard stick |
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Term
What is a threshold scan and how is it done? |
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Definition
A scan to connect two rooms or the inside and outside of a residence together. Put the scanner in the threshold (B/W, 1/10 res) |
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Term
What resolution is needed for objects and small areas? |
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Definition
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Term
What resolution is needed for outdoors and large indoor spaces? |
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Definition
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Term
What resolution is needed for indoors and small outdoor spaces. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the 3 types of metering and when are they best used? |
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Definition
Even weighted: if lighting is uniform. horizon weighted: best for scenes with bright overhead. Zenith weighted: scenes where bright lighting comes from eye level or below |
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Term
What is adaptive scanning? |
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Definition
It is scanning in grayscale the whole area and only the important areas in color |
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Term
What must the settings be for the FARO to scan BPA and SIR? |
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Definition
1/4 resolution, 4x quality min |
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Term
True or False: You must scan the bloodstain or bullet holes before mapping? |
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Definition
False, you ID the stain and then map. Put markes at the end of patterns |
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Term
What are the 2 types of large-scale 3D scanners? |
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Definition
Time-of-flight and Phase shift |
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Term
What type of scanner is the FARO? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the first step in examining remains? |
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Definition
Perform a taphonomic assessment |
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Term
what is a taphonomic assessment? |
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Definition
Full inventory of the area, evaluate the condition of the remains, estimate time since death (also known as PMI) |
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Term
What does the taphonomic assessment inventory include? |
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Definition
ID and completeness of all skeletal elements found, whether skeletal remains are adult or immature, and in the event of remaining flesh: X-rays and photography |
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Term
Describe what is looked for when evaluating the condition of the remains. |
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Definition
This focuses on the primary post mortem processes: decomposition stage, insect life cycle, evidence of scavenger modification, weatherering, and modification by water, sand, or geology |
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Term
What is looked at during a soft tissue examination? |
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Definition
fingerprints examined for viability, internal tissues and organs, bone formation centers in children, screening for small bones or artifacts, X-rays |
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Term
What are three ways an anthropologist can help? |
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Definition
Determine stature, sex, age estimate, ancestry, id unique healed bone figures or distortions, and dental configurations |
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Term
What are some challenges anthropologists have in trying to develop a biological profile? |
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Definition
Increasing mixed ancestry, models are based on only certain populations |
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Term
What is a biological profile used for? |
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Definition
assist LE in narrowing the range of possible victims |
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Term
What is circumstantial evidence? |
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Definition
Evidence that requires an investigator to infer certain facts |
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Term
Most coroners or medical examiners require [blank] identification. |
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Definition
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Term
What are some methods of positive ID other than visual? |
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Definition
fingerprints, DNA, dental records, x-rays, or unique apparatuses |
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Term
What are some challenges with facial approximation? |
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Definition
Many facial features are cartilage instead of bone, some features of a specific ancestry may not be present, the average tissue thickness will be underestimated for people with significant fat, key descriptive elements such as hair length, facial hair, or glasses must be guessed. |
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Term
True or False: All known or suspected human bones are protect by law. |
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Definition
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Term
How are most bones found? |
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Definition
By people doing ordinary and otherwise legal activities |
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Term
What are two primary objectives of recovery? |
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Definition
ID the individual represented by the remains and collect any and all evidence which might explain how the bones might have arrived at their present state and location |
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Term
True or False: The methods employed in the recovery of skeletal remains will determine the ease and reliability in which the case is resolved |
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Definition
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Term
What are some methods for determining grave locations? |
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Definition
Witness statements, visual clues, cadaver dogs, trenching and probing, area photography, and remote sensing. |
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Term
What is the difference between the search area and the recovery area? |
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Definition
The search area is the larger area that surrounds the recovery area. |
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Term
True or False: Not all cases of discovered human remains are criminal in nature. |
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Definition
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Term
True or False: the suspect/victim and investigators are most likely to take the path of least resistance. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the recovery area? |
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Definition
it is the more localized area than the search area where the body usually is. |
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Term
What are some things that may indicate a grave? |
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Definition
disturbance of vegetation and soil, temperature changes, scavenger activity |
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Term
Buried bodies normally decompose [blank] than bodies on the surface. |
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Definition
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Term
Why do buried bodies decompose slower than bodies on the surface? |
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Definition
Less exposure to scavengers and insects, less temperature fluctuation, less exposure to weather, compaction of the soil, differences in pH due to decaying matter, and the moisture level. |
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Term
True or False: When a body if found in water, it should be placed in the body back while still in the water. |
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Definition
True, so that you don't lose potential evidence or pieces of the body that may disarticulate |
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Term
What are the four crime scene search methods? |
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Definition
strip, grid, zone, and spiral |
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Term
What types of scenes do you use the strip search method? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of scenes do you use the grid search method? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of scenes do you use the zone method? |
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Definition
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Term
When do you use the spiral search method? |
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Definition
When looking for large objects in large outdoor scenes |
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Term
Describe the line method. |
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Definition
Set up lanes for each searcher and walk in straight lines. Useful for outdoor scenes when looking for items that are small. |
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Term
Describe the line Grid Method |
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Definition
Sometimes called the double line method. after the area has been searched horizontally it is gone over again vertically. Each area is effectively searched twice. |
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Term
What is the sequence of an outdoor search? |
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Definition
Establish photograph (overall photographs), take notes, initiate sketch, determine and establish scene boundaries, ID appropriate search method, searchers at arm's length apart in line (evidence is marked with a flag), midrange photos of marked evidence, closeup photo of marked evidence, include evidence on sketch, measure marked evidence, collect and package marked evidence. |
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Term
What is the zone and point-to-point search good for? |
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Definition
fragile evidence: footwear impressions, trace, and firearms |
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Term
How is the zone/point-to-point search methods performed? |
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Definition
Divide the scene into zones to be searched (i.e. body, bedroom, kitchen, etc.) |
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Term
Describe the spiral method. |
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Definition
The search team starts at the center of the scene and follows a spiral path outward from the center until the perimeter is reached. |
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Term
When is a spiral method often used? |
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Definition
When trying to locate dumped bodies. |
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Term
What is the first thing you do when excavating remains? |
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Definition
Determine the horizontal limits of the grave (soil color changes, disturbance, upheaval/depression, vegetation changes, animal activity) |
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Term
True or False: It is important to dig straight to the bottom of the grave. |
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Definition
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Term
How much soil is removed per layer when excavating a body? |
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Definition
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Term
How many soil samples in a grave should be taken? |
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Definition
samples from each level (of "horizon") |
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Term
What are some effects you may see from plants on human remains? |
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Definition
roots can cause mechanical damage, fungi can secrete acid, |
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Term
True or False: There is more total biomass of insects than of humans. |
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Definition
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Term
Define forensic entomology |
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Definition
The study of insects associated with a dead body |
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Term
What is the main purpose of forensic entomology? |
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Definition
To establish time since death / PMI |
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Term
[blank] hours after death, entomological evidence is the most accurate and only method available to determine elapsed time since death. |
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Definition
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Term
What are some things insects can tell us in forensic entomology? |
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Definition
Whether a body has been moved after death, whether the body has been disturbed, presence or position of wound sites, whether a victim used drugs or was poisoned, length of time of neglect or abuse in living victims |
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Term
Where is temperature measured for entomological evidence? |
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Definition
On top of the maggot masses |
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Term
When collecting maggots you keep [blank] alive and [blank] dead? |
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Definition
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Term
Why are half the maggots kept alive? |
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Definition
To grow them into adult flies so the species can be identified |
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Term
Why is species idenification of insects important? |
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Definition
Different species grow at different rates |
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Term
After evidence is collected and Identified, what are the two methods for estimating PMI? |
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Definition
Development of larval Diptera, primarily blow flies
Seasonal, successional colonization of the boyd by carrion insects |
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Term
What type of flies are usually the first to arrive? |
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Definition
Blow flies (Calliphoridae) |
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Term
How many stages are in the blow fly life cycle and what are they? |
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Definition
egg, 3 instar states, pupa, adult |
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Term
Describe the first instar stage |
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Definition
very delicate, prone to desiccation, must be near mucoidal or moist areas - wounds, orifices, ears, eyes, mouth |
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Term
describe the 2nd instar stage |
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Definition
can penetrate the skin by rasping mouth and enzymes |
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Term
describe the 3rd instar stage |
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Definition
voracious feeder and aggregates in large masses-maggots: the crop, a food storage organ in the forgut, can be seen as a dark oval through the translucent tissue of the maggot |
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Term
How long does a fly have to dry before it can fly? |
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Definition
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Term
Once the fly leaves emerges from the pupa, how does it obtain its energy? |
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Definition
It is phototropic, meaning it gets its energy from the sun |
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Term
True or False: Insect development is temperature dependent. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Buried in dirt several centimeters deep, scattered several meters away from body |
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Term
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Definition
collect and place in vial with paper towel to cushion- do not preserve |
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Term
True or False: Beetles must be stored individually. |
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Definition
True, they will eat other smaller beetles and flies |
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Term
What four things must the researcher know for the development of blow flies in corpses? |
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Definition
Oldest stage of blow fly associated with the body, species of the insect, temperature data, developmental data |
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Term
What is the primary question a forensic entomologist must ask about a blow fly? |
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Definition
How long does it take this species to reach this stage? |
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Term
What is the sequence of insects colonizing a body impacted by? |
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Definition
Nutritional changes of the body, geographic region, habitat, season, weather conditions, microclimate |
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Term
Why are insects so valuable for determining PMI? |
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Definition
Their lifecycle is very predictable |
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Term
True or False: The age of immature insect specimens is the absolute minimum amount of time a person has been dead. |
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Definition
True: i.e. a 3 day old maggot on a corpse would indicate the body has been dead for at least 3 days |
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Term
What are 5 stages of decomposition fueled by insect activity? |
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Definition
Fresh, Bloat, Decay, Post-decay, Dry (skeletal) |
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Term
At the fresh stage what happens? |
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Definition
flies begin to arrive, temperature falls to the ambient temperature, and autolysis begins |
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Term
What happens at the bloat phase? |
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Definition
Swelling due to gasses produced by bacteria, the temperature of the corpse rises, and flies are still present |
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Term
What happens at the Decay stage |
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Definition
Gases subside, bacteria and maggots break through the skin, large maggot masses and extreme amounts of fluid, unpleasant odor, larvae begin to pupate, corpse reduced to 20% of original mass. |
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Term
What happens in the Post-Decay stage? |
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Definition
Carcass reduced to hair, skin, and bones, fly population is reduced and replaced by other arthropods, hide beetles are dominant in dry environments, Mite and predatory beetle populations increase |
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Term
What happens to the dry stage in wet environments? |
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Definition
Does not always occur, especially in wet region and maggots will stay longer and hide beetles will not appear. In wet environments the hide beetles are replaced with nabid and reduviid insects |
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Term
What happens during the dry stage? |
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Definition
corpse is reduced to at least 10% of the original mass |
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Term
How far below soil can coffin flies go? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some other purposes of Ground Penetrating Radar |
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Definition
Looking for Dinosaur bones and unexploded ordinance |
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Term
When excavating a body, at a minimum, how many sketches are required and what are they? |
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Definition
2: overhead view sketch, elevation sketch |
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Term
What does DMORT stand for? |
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Definition
Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team |
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Term
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Definition
It is the act of pushing a rod into the ground to feel for soil compaction differences in order to identify a grave |
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Term
What is it called when particles in the water reflect light back to the camera lens, obscuring the image with spots and haze? |
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Definition
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Term
What is it called where conditions where silt, sediment, algae, and pollution create underwater visibility that is typically less than one foot |
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Definition
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Term
What is black water diving? |
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Definition
conditions where silt, sediment, algae, and pollution create underwater visibility that is typically less than 1 foot |
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Term
What is the proper order for evidence collection and preservation? |
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Definition
Transient, biological, latent |
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Term
What are the 4 exceptions for a warrantless search? |
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Definition
Emergency, prevent the destruction of evidence, consent, pursuant to lawful arrest (search the person and immediate surroundings) |
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Term
What is osteoarthritic lipping? |
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Definition
additional bone growth around the edges of vertebrae |
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Term
At what age can sex be determined from a skeleton |
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Definition
12-15 years of age, after puberty |
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Term
What web-based tool can LE and members of the general public search for lost or missing people? |
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Definition
NamUs (National Missing and Unidentified Persons System) |
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Term
What are two things to remember when considering the objectives of remains recovery? |
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Definition
1. The methods employed in the recovery of skeletal remains will determine the ease and reliability with which the case is resolved.
2. The bones and possible associated tissues are frequently the only physical evidence available to resolve the issue of cause and manner of death. |
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