Terms Flashcards
Algor Mortis
The cooling of the body temperature after death as it equilibrates with the ambient temperature. Second stage of changes after death. Result of cessation in thermoregulation.
Beveling
The result of plug-and-spall fractures caused by fast-moving objects. Sort of cone shaped bone erosion in the direction of the bullet path through the cranial vault caused by the forward moving force of the bullet.
Plug-and-Spall
When a high-velocity projectile passes through the bone, a plug of bone in the projectile’s path is displaced and spall are small flakes of the bone that are broken of when the projectile penetrates the other side of the bone.
Bloat
Stage two of decomposition which includes the first visible signs of inflation of the abdomen due to various gases produced by bacteria inside the cadaver. Leaked enzumes from first stage begin producing the gases as methane and ammonia.
Callus
Bony and cartilaginous material forming a connecting bridge across a bone fracture during repair. Within one to two weeks after an injury, a provisional callus forms, enveloping the fracture site.
A soft callus starts to form, made up of new connective tissue, blood vessels, cartilage and soft spongy bone. By 12 weeks after the fracture, osteoblasts have transformed the soft callus into a hard one.
Commingling
The presence of more than one body or skeleton or the intermixing of body parts from more than one individual, such as may occur from a mass disaster or mass graves.
Gnawing
Roer
Squirrels and other rodents can chew the ends off bones, to the point of destroying their distinctive shape completely. The gnawing marks can also obscure evidence of trauma to the bone or even be mistaken for weapon marks.
Bite or chew a bone so hard that it gradually disappears
High-velocity trauma
Meters per second
Rapid application of force over a small surface area. Produced by bullets from firearms or sharpnel from a blast. Alterations are round, oval or keyhole shaped. Round is seen when projectile impacts perpendicular to the surface of the bone. When is not perpendicular, it is more likely to be oval or keyhole shaped. Another characteristic is beveling or angling of the alteration in the direction of the projectile.
Radiating or concentric fractures. Little or no plastic deformation because force is applied so rapidly that bone does not have time to bend and deform. Greater degree of fracturing and fragmentation.
Kerf Marks
Slit made by cutting with a saw. The width of a saw. Describe the thickness of the cut that a saw makes in bone. The teeth of the saw are designed to cut hard material. As saws progresses through material, they create a kerf or groove.
Keyhole Defect
Characteristic of a type of entrance wound caused by a bullet striking the surface of a flat bone at a shallow angle. The defect is characterized by a rounded portion with a clean margin where the bullet first perforates bone and a wider area with external beveling on the opposite end.
Unique fracture pattern when a bullet strikes bone at an angle. As a bullet strikes bone at a steep angle (tangentially), the initial defect is typically oval in shape.
Livor Mortis
Post-Mortem
Post-mortem sign of death consisting of pooling of blood in the lower portion or dependent parts of the body after death. This results in a dark purple discoloration of the skin. Occurs because the heart is no longer pumping and moving blood through the body. Accordingly, gravity causes the red blood cells to sink and pool in some parts of the body.
Low-Velocity Trauma (Slow impact)
Kilometers per hour
Slow load application to the bone over a large surface area. The most important determinant of the morphology of a fracture is the speed. Slow-velocity produce sharp and blunt injuries. A slow force permits the bone to respond an compensate for an increase in stress; when this is removed, the bone may:
* Return to its original shape
* Remain deformed
* Fail
Beatings, motor vehicle accidents, falls from heights, airplance crushes
Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI)
The fewest possible number of people present in a skeletal assemblage.
Pathology
Study of diseases.
Involves the study and diagnosis of disease through the examination of surgically removed organs, tissues (biopsy samples), bodily fluids, and in some cases the whole body (autopsy).
Pits and Punctures
Hoyos, fosas y pinchazos, perforaciones
Bite marks left in the form of holes in bone.
Pits tend to be more superficial and can be located on any part of the skeleton.
Punctures are deeper holes usually found in areas where bone is thin or on the ends of long bones.
Carnivores as wolves, coyotes, foxes, dogs and cats and some omnivores as pigs and bears leave punctures, pits, scoring, furrows on the bone.