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A review of the contributions of forensic archaeology and anthropology to the process of disaster victim identification.

Hanson, I. and Fenn, J., 2024. A review of the contributions of forensic archaeology and anthropology to the process of disaster victim identification. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 69 (5), 1637-1657.

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DOI: 10.1111/1556-4029.15553

Abstract

Forensic archaeology and anthropology have developed significantly over past decades and now provide considerable assistance to the investigation process of disaster victim recovery and identification. In what are often chaotic death and crime scenes, the formal process of utilizing archaeological methods can bring control, order, and ensure systematic search. Procedures assist in defining scene extent, locating victims and evidence, rule out areas for consideration, and provide standardized recording and quality assurance through dedicated use of standardized forms (pro formas). Combined archaeological and anthropological search methods maximize opportunities to recovery the missing through identifying remains, mapping distributions, and providing accounting of victims at the scene. Anthropological assistance in examinations contributes to individual assessment, resolving commingling and fragmentation issues, and utilizing DNA sampling methods and matching data to reassociate and account for the missing. Utilization of archaeology, anthropology, and DNA matching data provides scope to review crime scene recovery and determine requirements and potential for further survey and retrieval. Adopting the most suitable methods for a particular context can maximize recovery, efficiency, and resource use. Case studies demonstrate the utility of archaeological methods in a range of scenarios. They exemplify the success of multidisciplinary analysis in providing evidence of the sequence of events, the timing of events, the impact of taphonomic processes, the location and accounting of victims, and the demonstration of systematic scene search. The considerations provided in this article, utilizing archaeology and anthropology processes, may assist investigators in planning and implementing responses to mass fatalities.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:0022-1198
Additional Information:Publication pending 06/24
Uncontrolled Keywords:atrocity crime scene; aviation disasters; commingling; disaster victim identification; DNA matching; explosion; forensic anthropology; forensic archaeology; investigation process; mass fatalities; mass graves; taphonomic processes
Group:Faculty of Media & Communication
ID Code:40022
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:18 Jun 2024 09:16
Last Modified:10 Sep 2024 13:06

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