Forensic Anthropology

Forensic anthropology refers to the use of physical anthropology in a legal setting. The adjective "forensic" refers to the application of science to a court of law. Forensic anthropologists do not determine cause of death of the unknown remains. That is the realm of the medical examiner or coroner. When human remains are found during anthropological or archaeological excavation, and when badly decomposed, burned, or skeletonized remains are found, a forensic anthropologist is needed. Metric and nonmetric traits are used to evaluate such characteristics of the bones as the minimum number of individuals, sex, stature, age, ancestry and race, health, and trauma. Sometimes the forensic anthropologist must determine whether the remains found are actually human. Many times, positive identitification can be established from such remains, but often only an exclusionary identity can be drawn. The discipline provides evidence in criminal cases. A forensic anthropologist can determine the type of weapon or tool used in an attack, or to dismember a body after death, by examining the marks left upon the bones. Even cremated remains can provide a surprising amount of information about the deceased individual. Their evidence can also help a coroner decide whether a death was caused by homicide, suicide, or natural causes.

Forensic anthropology in the United States

Forensic anthropology is one of the divisions of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. Two of the most important collections of human skeletal remains are the Hamann-Todd Collection, now housed in the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and the Terry Collection, now housed in the Smithsonian Institution. These collections are an important historic basis for the statistical analysis necessary to make estimates and predictions from found remains. More modern collections include the Anthropological Research Facility and the William M. Bass Donated Skeletal Collection at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

Forensic anthropologists of note

See also:: Forensics, Forensic odontology, Human skeleton, Expert witness

External links

Anthropology

 

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