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A Bibliography Related to Crime Scene Interpretation with ...

A Bibliography Related to Crime Scene Interpretation with ...

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Human tibia and fibula fragment in the context of soil stratification on an eroded river embankmentGeoarchaeology and Soil ScienceGeological and pedological processes of formation affect the ante-, peri-, and post-deposition of artifactsor evidence. An understanding of these processes must extend beyond the immediate crime scene <strong>to</strong> the surroundingenvironment. For example, information that a victim’s body was buried near a river ten years ago, is greatlysupplemented <strong>with</strong> an understanding of the effects of soil formation and erosion in a flood plain environment.Although every site will be unique, there are basic principles of stratification, superposition, and contemporaneousdeposition, which have served as tenets of geology and archaeology since the seventeenth century.The impact of burrowing animals, and even earthworms, on buried objects is well documented. Anawareness of the terrestrial and subterranean fauna inhabiting crime scene environs may be essential inunderstanding the formation and or disruption of soils containing primary, associated, and trace evidence. For thisreason the reader is directed <strong>to</strong> “Reconnaissance, Surveys, and Mapping Techniques” for general guides <strong>to</strong> thetypes of faunda which might inhabit a particular crime scene area.This section contains references directly and indirectly addressing soil sciences including the recognitionand interpretation of soils in archaeological contexts - geoarchaeology. Of interest, from the standpoint of traceevidence, are those references <strong>to</strong> cases in which geoarchaeology has been utilized not only <strong>to</strong> understanding soilformation/alteration related <strong>to</strong> buried evidence, but in identifying once buried items via trace soil evidence (ie.Adovasio, et al. [1991]). It has been the experience of the compiler that forensic scientists are generally unfamiliar<strong>with</strong> work accomplished on, and <strong>to</strong>ward the interpretation of, traditional archaeological sites. Most forensicreferences in forensic geology concentrate on labora<strong>to</strong>ry techniques and analyses, rather than formal archaeologicalcollection of geological and pedological samples/evidence. Therefore, this section occasionally referencesarchaeological site reports, or journal articles, citing specific site interpretations and the techniques used in thoseinterpretations.Abbott, James T.1988 A Re-evaluation of Boulderflow as a Relative dating Technique or Surficial Boulder Features. Plains Anthropologist, 33: 113-118.1997 Stratigraphy and Geoarchaeology of the Red Canyon Rockshelter, Crook County, Wyoming. Geoarchaeology, 12(4):315-335.146

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