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Trace Evidence

open access: yes
Trace Evidence was an installation based on the life and works of Esther Krumbachova, the Prague film maker and ...
McKee, Francis
core   +6 more sources

Trace Evidence Overview

open access: yes, 2013
The forensic examination of trace evidence requires an understanding of the many facets of the forensic process from the crime scene to the laboratory and, ultimately, the courts.
C. Roux, J. Robertson
openaire   +2 more sources

Trace Evidence

2023
Chemometrics has been established as a highly informative tool for the analysis and interpretation of trace evidence, yet there are many areas in which its potential remains unexploited. This chapter will use existing literature to demonstrate how chemometric methods can be applied to the characterisation of trace evidence (with a particular focus on ...
G. Sauzier, S. W. Lewis
openaire   +1 more source

Trace Evidence and the Pathologist

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 1983
The collection, preservation, and analysis of trace evidence are probably the most neglected areas of both police investigation and forensic pathology. The information that can be provided by hair, primer residues, fingernail clippings, and bloodstains is highlighted.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Value of Trace Evidence

New England Journal of Medicine, 1951
THE VALUE OF TRACE EVIDENCE In medicolegal investigations even exceedingly small particles of biologic material may have immense value. In a recent case, 45 mg.
openaire   +2 more sources

Trace Evidence—The Invisible Witness

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1986
Abstract This paper reviews the use of microscopic trace evidence in actual casework. Three cases are discussed in which the microscopic analysis of trace evidence was used to: associate the people, places, and things involved in the incident; reconstruct the event; and describe the occupation(s) of the participants.
openaire   +2 more sources

Forensic DNA Trace Evidence Interpretation

2023
Forensic DNA Trace Evidence Interpretation: Activity Level Propositions and Likelihood Ratios provides all foundational information required for a reader to understand the practice of evaluating forensic biology evidence given activity level propositions and to implement the practice into active casework within a forensic institution.
Bas Kokshoorn, Duncan Taylor
openaire   +2 more sources

Reassessing the evidence for the earliest traces of life

Nature, 2002
The isotopic composition of graphite is commonly used as a biomarker in the oldest (>3.5 Gyr ago) highly metamorphosed terrestrial rocks. Earlier studies on isotopic characteristics of graphite occurring in rocks of the approximately 3.8-Gyr-old Isua supracrustal belt (ISB) in southern West Greenland have suggested the presence of a vast microbial ...
Mark A, van Zuilen   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

7. Trace evidence

2010
Fibres, hairs, paint, glass, and explosives traces are examined by forensic scientists in a wide range of crimes from burglary to terrorism. The distinctive characteristics of trace evidence are its microscopic size or minute amount, its ability to transfer readily from one item to another, and that it is subsequently lost from the item following that ...
openaire   +1 more source

Trace and Contact Evidence

2016
Trace evidence is ubiquitous because it comes from the environment in which we interact as part of our daily lives. Although the environment in which we interact is populated by manufactured materials supplied at the transient whims of the global manufacturing economy, our behaviour as human beings remains highly individual.
openaire   +1 more source

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