Beyond the body farm : a legendary bone detective explores murders, mysteries, and the revolution in forensic science William M Bass; Jon Jefferson
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: New York : William Morrow, ©2007.Edition: 1st edDescription: xxii, 282 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:- 9780060875282
- 614.17 BAS
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Books | CUTN Central Library Medicine, Technology & Management | Non-fiction | 614.17 BAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Gifted / Donated Books | 28918 |
Introduction: A half-century of forensic evolution and revolution --
The golden bowl, the burning palace : applying modern science to ancient bones --
Splash landing, part 1 : finding answers in teeth and skull morphology --
Shedding light on a victims bones : using UV to illuminate identity --
Forensics at the speed of flight : interpreting teeth and trauma --
The rockets' red glare, bodies bursting in air : dealing with a mass disaster --
Dead for the holidays : determining time since death --
A Texas scorcher : finding a fingerprint in a frontal sinus --
No butts about it : convicting a killer by matching bite marks --
Listening to the bugs : pinpointing time since death with forensic entomology --
The professor versus the computer : harnessing software to determine race and ID a victim --
Science at the cutting edge : scanning a knife mark with electron microscopy --
Leoma Patterson, part 1 : reopening an old coffinand an old case with DNA --
Splash landing, part 2 : searching the depths with sonar --
Leoma Patterson, part 2 : putting a face on the dead --
The day the bopper died : digging for the truth, and finding it with x-rays --
Leoma Patterson, part 3 : pushing the limits of DNA testing.
A forensic anthropologist tracks the field's increasing sophistication as reflected by cases throughout his career, describing such newer technologies as DNA processing and electron microscopy, and examining past cases in which new developments proved pivotal.
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