| Literature DB >> 16100764 |
Heather Miller Coyle1, Cheng-Lung Lee, Wen-Yu Lin, Henry C Lee, Timothy M Palmbach.
Abstract
Forensic botany is still an under-utilized resource in forensic casework, although it has been used on occasion. It is an area of specialty science that could include traditional botanical classification of species, DNA, or materials evidence (trace and transfer evidence), crime mapping or geo-sourcing, all dependent on the specific case application under consideration. Critical to the evaluation of plant evidence is careful collection, documentation, and preservation for later scientific analysis. This article reviews proper procedures and recent cases where botanical evidence played a role in establishing either manner or time of death. Plant evidence can be useful for determining if a death was due to an accident, suicide, or homicide, or what time of year burial may have taken place. In addition, plant evidence can be used to determine if a crime scene is a primary or secondary scene and to locate missing bodies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16100764
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Croat Med J ISSN: 0353-9504 Impact factor: 1.351