Top Banner
Forensic Anthropology
66

Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Krista Loker
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Forensic Anthropology

Page 2: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology

Answer?• What is the race of the individual? • What is the sex of the individual? • What is the age of the individual? • What is the stature of the individual?

• What pathologies did the individual have?

• What traumas did the individual have? • What individual traits did the individual have?

Page 3: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Identity of Decomposed or Skeletal Remains

• Are the remains human or animal? (butchers remains and skeletal remains of dead pets etc. may be found in unlikely places)

• Are they really bones? (wood, stones) • Are they human? • How many bodies? • How long dead? - recent or ancient (e.g. construction or digging at an old burial site)

• Cause of death?

Page 4: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

How does this Work?

• Forensic anthropologists use regression equations to determine sex, age, stature, and race of skeletal remains.

• Regression equations are mathematical equations developed from studies of bones of individuals of known sex, age, race, and stature, and are used to predict such things of even fragmentary skeletal remains."

Page 5: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Sex Estimation

• The sex of an individual is determined, when soft tissue is not present, by a number of skeletal indicators.

• The more indicators used to determine sex, the more accurate the results.

• A forensic anthropologist is analytically limited by the bones present and the condition of the bones.

Page 6: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• In general, the muscles in a man are stronger and more developed than in a woman.

• Bones of men are larger and more robust than bones of women.

• Some bones display specific features which can be used to help determination of the sex of the skeleton. The best indicators are the: – Skull – Pelvis – Head of the Femur

Page 7: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Sex Estimation – Adult

• Usually related to size in adult long bones

• Male bones: usually larger, longer in a single population – be cautious if different populations are involved

• Maximum diameter of head of humerus and head of femur may be used (Bass).

• Much more difficult to estimate sex in children’s skeletons.

Page 8: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Sex Estimation: Skull

• Good area for sex determination• Generalization: male skull more robust, muscle-marked than female: ABSOLUTE

DIFFERENCES SELDOM EXIST (Bass)

• Sex estimation: face, mandible, vault

Page 9: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Sex Estimation: Face

1. Supraorbital (Brow) ridges: more prominent in males

2. Superior orbital margin: sharper in females

3. Palate: larger in males4. Teeth: larger in males (Bass)5. Mastoid process: more prominent and rugged in males.

6. Orbit (Eye socket): Rounder in females, more rectangular in males

7. Chin: more pronounced in males and larger jaws.

Page 10: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 11: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 12: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 13: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Pelvis

• Women give birth. For this reason, the pelvis of a woman is larger than the pelvis of a man.

• The pelvis of a woman is wide and circular whereas the pelvis of a man is narrow and heart-shaped.

• Two angles, the sub-pubic angle and the sciatic notch, cause the differences in the shape of the pelvis.

• In women, the sub-pubic angle and sciatic notch are wide. In men, the sub-pubic angle and sciatic notch are narrow.

Page 14: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Male Pelvis Subpubic Notch

Page 15: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Female Pelvis Subpubic Notch

Page 16: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Pubis Bone Traits Related to Sex

Trait Female Male

Ventral arc: a roughened projection of bone visible on the anterior surface of the pubis bone

Present

Absent

Pubis body width (mm)

40 25-30

Subpubic angle (degrees) angle made by the inferior borders of the articulated pubis bone

>90 <90

Page 17: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 18: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 19: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Head of the Femur

• In men, the diameter of the head of the femur is larger than 51 mm.

• In women, the diameter of the head of the femur is less than 45 mm.

Page 20: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Determining Ages of Skeletons

• Bone growth stops at about 20 yrs. of age in humans.

• Adult bone continuously adapts to prevailing stresses by appropriate deposition and resorption.

• Deposition and resorption are under hormonal control - integrated with regulation of blood calcium levels.

Page 21: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Skeletal Age

• Skeletal age is the estimated age at which a person died. Skeletal age can be determined by looking at the following: – sutures of the skull – teeth – ribs – vertebrae – growth areas of the long bones: epiphyses

Page 22: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Sutures of the Skull

• When a baby is born, the skull is still growing.

• To accommodate this growth, the different bones of the skull are separate.

• By the age of 7, all the different bones have finished growing and the fontanelles have disappeared.

Page 23: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Skull Sutures

Page 24: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

The Teeth

• The teeth are arranged in upper and lower arches. Those of the upper are called maxillary; those of the lower are mandibular.

Page 25: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• There are four types of teeth with very different shapes:

• Incisors (2)• Canines (1)• Premolars (bicuspids) (2)

• Molars (2-3)• Individual teeth are quite distinct, even when lost from a jaw.

Page 26: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Dental Formula (from the midline)

• Primary (deciduous) teeth. – incisors, two upper and two lower;

– canines, one upper and one lower;

– molars two upper and two lower equals ten per side.

• Permanent teeth.– incisors, two upper and two lower;

– canines, one upper and one lower;

– premolars, two upper and two lower;

– molars, three upper and three lower.

Page 27: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Teeth

• The first teeth to appear are the incisors, which are followed by canines and molars.

• When chewing food, teeth grind down.

• Comparing different teeth gives an idea of how long the teeth have been used.

• Eventually teeth may be lost, due to caries or attrition.

Page 28: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

X-Rays Are Used to Date Skulls

• This is the side view of the dentition of a six year old boy.

• There is still some variation from person to person in the order in which the teeth erupt.

Page 29: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Baby Teeth Permanent Teeth

Incisors: 7-12 months Incisors: 6.5 years

Canines: 2 years Canines: 10.8 years

Premolar 1: none Premolar 1: 10.4 years

Premolar 2: none Premolar 2: 11 years

Molar 1: 3 years Molar 1: 6.2 years

Molar 2: 3 years Molar 2: 12.2 years

Molar 3: none Molar 3: 18 years

Page 30: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Baby Teeth Teeth with 6 year molars

Teeth with 12 year MolarsTeeth with Wisdom Teeth

Page 31: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Dental Disease - Cavities, Abscesses, and Attrition

Page 32: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Ribs

• Because of breathing, the front part of the ribs is constantly moving.

• As a person gets older, the front part of the ribs begin to change and form bony spikes.

Page 33: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Vertebrae

• As a person gets older, bony spikes can also start growing on the vertebrae.

• This starts at approximately 40 years of age.

Page 34: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Growth areas of the long bones

(epiphysis)• From birth to ±25 years of age, a person grows at a relatively constant rate.

• Growth takes place at the ends of the long bones.

• At a certain age, growth is completed and this can also be seen on the bone.

Page 35: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Epiphyseal Fusion

• The pattern of fusion of bone ends (epiphysis) to bone shaft (metaphysis) in each bone indicates age.

• Charts & tables are used. • The upper arm stops growing at the shoulder at approximately age 20 and at the elbow at approximately age 14.5.

• The upper leg stops growing at the hip at approximately age 17.5 and at the knee at approximately age 18.

Page 36: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 37: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Determining Ages of Skeletons

• Cranial suture fusion is less reliable.

• Pubic symphysis changes slightly with age.

• Arthritic changes and osteoporosis give further clues.

Page 38: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 39: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Arthritic changes and osteoporosis give further clues to the ages of skeletons.

Page 40: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Individual Characteristics

Fractures

Head Injuries

Page 41: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Individual Characteristics

• Bone disease (Paget's disease, tumors)• Previous injury to bone (fracture callus, prosthesis, metallic fragments).

• Comparison of trabecular pattern of bone.

• Pattern of skull's frontal air sinuses. Outline is unique and comparisons with clinical X-rays are useful.

Page 42: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Height

• An intact corpse can be measured, but a disarticulated or incomplete skeleton has to be pieced together.

• Stature• 3.26 x (humerus) + 62.10 = stature +/-4.43cm

• 3.42 x (radius) + 81.56 = stature +/-4.30• 3.26 x (ulna) + 78.29 = stature +/-4.42

– (there will be 2 calculations for stature, based on the upper and lower standard of error)

Page 43: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Race or Ethnic Group Determination

• The skull is the only reliable bone. It is not possible to narrow down the identification to race:– Caucasian (all whites) – Negroid (all blacks - African, African Americans and West Indians)

– Mongoloid (Chinese, Japanese, American Indians)

Page 44: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

In Caucasians:

Nasal openings are narrow.

Face is flatter

Page 45: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

In Mongoloids “Shovel-shaped" concave upper incisor teeth.

Cheekbones (Zygomatic arches): are wider and more prominent.

Greater width between eyes.

Page 46: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

In Negroids:

Face projects forward

Nasal opening is wider

Page 47: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Minimum Number of Individuals

• Used in mass graves- like in Yugoslavia or Afghanistan and mass disasters.

• Count all the bones and assign left vs. right.

• Use the highest number of a bone as the minimum number.

• Also, can assign bones to individual skeletons and then count them.

Page 48: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 49: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Dating of Human Skeletal Remains

• Are they ancient or modern bones? (i.e. greater or less than 50 years).

• Rate of skeletonization is highly variable. In the tropics a body can be reduced to a skeleton in 3 weeks.

• Remarkable preservation of body is seen in acidic peaty soil

• Thus, environmental conditions have to be taken into account.

Page 50: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

2400 year old bog body from Denmark

Page 51: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Age of Human Remains

• Naked eye appearance is unreliable: • Tags of soft tissue, periosteum, ligaments etc, indicate less than 5 years old.

• Soapy texture of surface indicates age less than a few decades.

• Light, crumbling bones are likely to be a century or more old.

Page 52: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Laboratory Tests Can Help

• Immunological reaction between bone extract and anti human serum ceases within months of death.

• If blood pigments are present bones are usually less than 10 years old.

• Up to 20 amino acids may be identified in bones less than a century old.

• Fluorescence of freshly sawn bone surface under UV light diminishes after 100 years.

• New bones contain 4.0 - 4.5 gms% nitrogen; 2.5 gms% indicates approximately 350 years.

• Radioactive carbon dating indicates which century.

Page 53: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Taphonomy

• Coined from the Greek words taphos, for "burial," and nomos, for "law."

• Forensic Taphonomy : The Postmortem Fate of Human Remains

• Skeletal trauma, decomposition, and dispersal of remains.

• Weathering, a taphonomic process, is very useful in determining the elapsed time since death.

Page 54: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Facial Reconstruction

• Skull can be scanned into a computer and "fleshed" by computer reconstruction to give likely facial appearance in life.

• Unfortunately eye color, hair color and lips are independent of bony structure.

Page 55: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• Pearl was a female who died in her early forties approximately three hundred years ago.

• She was Caucasian, of European ancestry and stood about 5'1".

• Her dental health was extremely poor and she had lost 63 per cent of her teeth prior to death. She had no teeth on either side of her jaw. This was most important as the loss of those teeth would evidence themselves in the final reconstruction as sunken cheeks. Of her remaining teeth, the condition was poor and she had several abscesses.

• During her lifetime, there are indicators that she also suffered from acute infections, rickets, sinusities, an upper respiratory infection, arthritis, and gout. Whew--all this in an era when aspirin didn't exist!

• On the other hand, it was determined that she was very muscular, as the ridges on her long bones were very developed.

Page 56: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.
Page 57: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

The artist utilizes proper tissue depth data determined by race, gender, and age.

Artificial eyes are placed in the skull’s eye sockets, centered and at the proper depth.

The tissue markers are glued directly onto the skull.

Clay will be systematically applied directly on the skull, following the skull's contours; paying strict attention to the applied tissue markers.

Page 58: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Various measurements are made, and logged, to determine nose thickness/length, mouth thickness/width, and eye placement. Information such as geographic location of where the deceased lived, his or her lifestyle, and the various information provided to the artist by the Forensic Anthropologist and other professionals, is heavily relied upon when completing the reconstruction.

Page 59: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

This woman had missing side teeth and a small jaw. Hair is added by applying clay or a wig. Various items (glasses, clothing, hats) may be applied to better accentuate the features of the individual.This method can be very successful.

Page 60: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Cause of Death

• Anthropologists can distinguish between marks from the result of a weapon attack and those resulting from the gnawing and biting of bones by scavenging animals.

• They can also determine the exact kind of weapon and animal, and they can tell if a wound is old or if it occurred at death.

• They can be called upon to testify as to the type of weapon used (saw vs. knife).

Page 61: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Lizzie Bordon’s Father’s skull: Ax Whacked.

Page 62: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• Two outstanding cases of the use of forensic anthropology to successfully solve unsolved mysteries are the cases of Francisco Pizarro.

Page 63: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Pizarro conquered the Incas.

• Pizarro was hated by the Peruvians because he was a brutal ruler. On June 26, 1541 (at age 66), he was stabbed to death by a crowd of angry subjects and in view of many witnesses (Dickerson 1993).

• His brutal death is not questioned due to the well documentation at the time. It was his remains that were questioned.

Page 64: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• In the 1890's, Peruvian officials decided to put Pizarro's remains on exhibit. "They asked officials at the Cathedral of the Plaza de Aramis in Lima for Pizarro's body and were directed to a mummy, which they put on view." (Dickerson 1993)

• In 1978 workers discovered a secret niche that had been walled over in the cathedral, and on a shelf in the niche was a box with a skull and an inscription that identified it as the head of Pizarro.

• Another box was found containing the bones of several unidentified individuals (Dickerson 1993).

Page 65: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

• An investigation of the bones in the second box led to the discovery that the postcranial bones matched the skull in the first box.

• These bones and the skull were then placed together and prepared for study to determine if they had marks consistent with sword or knife wounds.

The Question was, "Who was the real Pizarro?"

Page 66: Forensic Anthropology. What Questions Can Forensic Anthropology Answer? What is the race of the individual? What is the sex of the individual? What is.

Who’s the Mummy?

• Just by using visual observation, researchers could tell that the skeleton had been stabbed many times, dying in the same way as Pizarro was reported to have died.

• The location of the wounds showed that the victim had been stabbed "about the head and body and apparently had tried to shield himself with his arm, a reaction common in stabbing deaths." (Dickerson 1993)

• On the other hand, the mummy had no such injuries at all (Dickerson 1993).