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Forensic Botany Ahmed Belghith
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Objectives: Understand the meaning of Forensic Botany
Learn what questions are answered by botany Learn the major case dealing with botany Learn about dendrochronology Learn the role of gastric contents in inverstigations Learn about plant assemblages
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Objectives Continued Learn how drowning can be analyzed using botany
Establish the use of gravesite evidence Identify the parts of a plant Identify the two types of plants Discover the definition of palynology Learn the role of a palynologist Learn how evidence is collected and analyzed Learn how botany is useful today
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Vocabulary Angiosperm Gymnosperm Palynology Pollen grain Spore Diatom
Postmortem interval Forensic botany Pollination Dendrochronology Autogamous Clandestine Grave Horticulture Photosynthesis Ecology Locard’s Principle of Exchange Lichen Vascular
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What is Forensic Botany?
Forensic Botany is the application of plant science to crime-scene analysis for use in legal cases Uses botanical evidence to solve crimes
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Questions answered by Botanical Evidence
Who? When? Where? What was eaten before death? Was the body moved? Post-Mortem interval?
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First Major Trial The Lindbergh kidnapping trial of 1931
Charles Lindbergh’s son abducted Richard Hauptmann convicted Used wood from his attic to fabricate a ladder Tracked to his attic by multiple wood tests Wood used in court as legal evidence Arthur Koehler’s botanical evidence was deemed as a Forensic Botanist expert
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Continued Charles Lindbergh’s son, Charles, before his abduction
Richard Hauptmann: the one convicted and executed for the abduction The ladder made by Hauptmann used to get into the house of Lindbergh
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Dendrochronology A method of determining the age of a tree by examining rings Different environments lead to a variety of ring conditions
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Assemblages A group of plants dominated by a particular species
Habitat samples are extracted from assemblages
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Gastric Contents Allows specialists to determine: Last meal
Post mortem interval Stage of digestion of food Type of food consumed Mastication Where the food was purchased in some instances
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Drowning Victims A persons lungs and airways are crucial to this aspect of forensic botany Upon a person’s demise in a body of water or transportation there allows foreign particles into the body Bacteria, diatoms, algae, and many other unnatural particles could relocate inside of a dead body.
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Continued Forensic lab specialists can determine PMI by examining the prevalence of algae and diatoms in the lungs Can also determine: Secondary crime scenes Cause of death
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Gravesite Evidence Old graves without a vault sink into and fill the actual site New gravesites recognized by: Different plants on the disturbed surface Absence of vegetation Mounds of soil
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Continued Clandestine graves are graves that are meant to be hidden
Check soil for: Magnetism Resistivity Use ground penetrating radar Can find remains from many years ago (not carbon dating)
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Parts of a Plant Each part of a plant serves a different function that supports its daily functions
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Two Types of Plants Gymnosperms angiosperms Not flowering
Unenclosed seeds on a cone Scaly or needle like leaves Flowering Seeds enclosed in an ovary Flat like leaves
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Palynology Palynology is the study of pollen, pollen grains, and spores in a geographical area There are over 300,000 types of pollen and they all are native to a specific area Pollen Grain- number and type of pollen characterized to a certain area
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Palynologists Palynologists study, interpret, and analyze pollen and spores Can be crucial in legal cases Pollen shares similar characteristics with spores but not the same function and each palynologist has to be knowledgeable of the differences
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Methods of Pollination
Pollination can occur in many ways: Wind Animals Water Insects Pollination Types: Self-pollination Cross-pollination Sometimes both
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Spore Producers Spores are a unit of organisms that are unicellular and reproduce asexually Consist of: Fungi(mushrooms) Mosses Liverwarts Ferns
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Type of Information that should be Recorded in Botany
When botanical evidence is gathered, certain information must be collected Evidence should be labeled with: Height Description Color Shape of flower, leaves, seeds, and stems
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Evidence Collection Habitat Samples are extracted from assemblages
Any plant sample should be placed in paper not plastic Samples could be temporarily stored using a plant press
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Evidence Analysis When at a crime scene photographers should photograph: Dominant and surrounding plants Unusual plants for an area Depressed grasses Possible entrances or exits
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How Important is Forensic Botany
Although Forensic Botany is a newer science, it has been very beneficial in cases It has been vital to cases and has even solved or at least helped to solve many crimes It has brought justice to many people, and as technology advances, the field of forensic botany could become even more helpful
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Works Cited http://dendro.cnre.vt.edu/forsite/idtype.htm
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