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Forensic Characteristics of Soil
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Soil: The Forensic Definition Any disintegrated surface material, natural and/or artificial, that lies on or near the earth’s surface E.g. naturally occurring rocks, minerals, vegetation, animal matter, glass, paint chips, asphalt, brick fragments and cinders
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Comparative Analysis Link to geographical location of a crime Soil evidence compared to reference samples collected from crime scene Color (1,100 distinguishable soil colors -2008) Texture
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Mineral Naturally occurring crystalline solid
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Rock Combination of minerals Types Igneous Metamorphic Sedimentary
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Building Materials Brick, Plaster, Concrete Blocks combinations of rocks and minerals Evidence in Breaking & Entering Case
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Analysis of Soil Density-gradient Tube A glass tube filled from bottom to top with liquids of successively lighter densities used to determine the density distribution of soil See Text: Criminalistics, p. 113 Fig 4-22
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Forensic Value of Soil Typically provides only Class Characteristics
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Collection and Preservation of Soil Evidence Establish variation in soil at crime scene by collecting intervals within 100-yd radius Collect samples at alibi locations 1 Tablespoon of top layer is appropriate Individually packaged and labeled Do not remove from an object such as a shoe or garment Do not break up lumps – layering effect may be helpful
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