With no paper trail, can science determine age? – science-in-society – 11 May 2012 – New Scientist

GUESSING someone’s age can be risky at cocktail parties, but what about when their future is at stake? For refugees, the difference between childhood and adulthood can be the difference between asylum, deportation or jail.

Thanks to international child protection laws, asylum-seekers are more likely to be admitted to wealthy nations if they are under 18. Minors get access to many social programmes and as such they can be costly to governments, so officials want to be confident on the age issue. When documents are in question – or do not exist – immigration departments look to science.

via With no paper trail, can science determine age? – science-in-society – 11 May 2012 – New Scientist.

University of Portsmouth news – Inaugural lecture by Professor Mike Nash

Mike Nash, Professor of Criminology at the Institute of Criminal Justice Studies, is to give his inaugural lecture on the 25th April, under the title ‘A Reassurance con? Public protection for modern times.’

via University of Portsmouth news – Inaugural lecture by Professor Mike Nash.

Russian plane crash: search teams begin retrieving bodies | World news | guardian.co.uk

Clearer weather has allowed Indonesian helicopters to land and retrieve the bodies of the 45 people on a Russian-made plane that crashed into a volcano during a demonstration flight.

Investigators still have found no sign of the black box recorder that might explain why the new Sukhoi Superjet-100 slammed into Mount Salak about halfway through a 50-minute flight intended to woo potential Indonesian airline buyers on Wednesday.

via Russian plane crash: search teams begin retrieving bodies | World news | guardian.co.uk.

The Bone Detective – YouTube

Diane France, Ph. D., D-ABFA is certified as an expert by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology and was the president of that board for several years. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, the director of the Laboratory for Human Identification at Colorado State University and is a of NecroSearch, International, a multidisciplinary team dedicated to helping law enforcement search for clandestine graves and recovering evidence from crime scenes. She is published on several topics related to forensic anthropology and frequently lectures around the country and the world.

via The Bone Detective – YouTube.

via The Bone Detective – YouTube.

Objectives of Bloodstain Pattern Interpretation

  1. Origin(s) of the bloodstains.
  2. Distances between impact areas of blood spatter and origin at time ofbloodshed.
  3. Type and direction of impact that produced bloodstains or spatter.
  4. Object(s) that produced particular bloodstain patterns.
  5. Number of blows, shots, etc. that occurred.
  6. Position of victim, assailant, or objects at the scene during bloodshed.
  7. Movement and direction of victim, assailant or objects at scene afterbloodshed.
  8. Support or contradiction of statements given by suspect or witnesses.
  9. Additional criteria for estimation of postmortem interval.
  10. Correlation with other laboratory and pathology findings relevant to the investigation.

 

Modern humans emerged far earlier than previously thought

An international team of researchers based at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology in Beijing, including a physical anthropology professor at Washington University in St. Louis, has discovered well-dated human fossils in southern China that markedly change anthropologists perceptions of the emergence of modern humans in the eastern Old World.

The research was published Oct. 25 in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The discovery of early modern human fossil remains in the Zhirendong (Zhiren Cave) in south China that are at least 100,000 years old provides the earliest evidence for the emergence of modern humans in eastern Asia, at least 60,000 years older than the previously known modern humans in the region.

“These fossils are helping to redefine our perceptions of modern human emergence in eastern Eurasia, and across the Old World more generally,” says Eric Trinkaus, PhD, the Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor in Arts & Sciences and professor of physical anthropology.

The Zhirendong fossils have a mixture of modern and archaic features that contrasts with earlier modern humans in east Africa and southwest Asia, indicating some degree of human population continuity in Asia with the emergence of modern humans.

The Zhirendong humans indicate that the spread of modern human biology long preceded the cultural and technological innovations of the Upper Paleolithic and that early modern humans co-existed for many tens of millennia with late archaic humans further north and west across Eurasia.

via Modern humans emerged far earlier than previously thought.