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Forensic Anthropology

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Forensic

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Forensic

Anthropology

• Barely 40 years old as a legitimate branch of forensic science.

• Years ago, anthropologists who studied the corpses and bone fragments of crime scene victims were looked down upon by the peers.

• The people of yester year who shaped today’s Forensic Anthropology consist of scientists,

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Was a well known sausage maker

• On May 1st, 1897 his wife Louisa disappeared.

• Adolph claimed that his wife ran off to relatives after an argument.

• Neighbors became suspicious when Luetgert’s two young sons began to ask door-to-door if anyone had seen their mother.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Six days later, in order to stop the rumors,

Luetgert reported his wife’s disappearance to the police.

• Police Captain Herman Schuettler and his team of investigators interviewed people in the

neighborhood.

• The neighbors described Luetgert as an

adulterous wife beater. Luetgert did not live in the family home, but in the office of the sausage factory.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Business associates of Luetgert said that he wanted to expand his sausage-making

business but his wife, Louisa, disagreed.

• Police questioned workers of the factory who said that weeks before Louisa’s disappearance, Luetgert ordered 375 pounds of potash and

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• The factory’s night guard said that on the

night of the disappearance, Luetgert sent him on an errand then gave him the entire night off.

• The guard left Luetgert stirring a large vat of boiling liquid. He had never seen him do this before.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Luetgert fired up the furnace under the vat and kept vigil all night.

• The next morning, the employees found

Luetgert asleep in the back office and a greasy substance all over the floor.

• Other witnesses claim they saw Luetgert and his wife enter the factory the night before. Some witnesses even heard screams coming from inside the factory.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Captain Schuettler and his men found several small bone fragments, a steel corset stay, a false tooth and a wedding ring inscribed with the initials L.L..

• Experts from the University of Chicago told the police that boiling potash and arsenic would dissolve a human body within two hours. The potash would leach the calcium out of Louisa’s bones, reducing them to a jelly.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• Charles Deneen was the Illinois State’s attorney assigned to the case. He had to

prove that the bone fragments were human.

• Several “experts” he contacted could not

distinguish between animal or human bone.

• Deneen contacted a specialist in the study of ancient human remains, George Dorsey, a

curator of physical anthropology at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.

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The Sausage Maker

Adolph Luetgert

• There were four bone fragments and they could fit on tablespoon.

• Dorsey testified that the bone fragments could only come from a human.

• While Dorsey’s testimony helped cement the case against Luetgert, his reputation suffered.

• His colleagues couldn’t believe that he “lowered” himself by “performing” at a trial.

• George Dorsey opened the door for other anthropologists.

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The Webster Case

• On the Friday before Thanksgiving, 1849, Dr. John Webster had a meeting with Dr. George Parkman.

• Dr. Parkman had loaned Dr. Webster some money.

• On the night in question, Dr. Webster had

(according to him) an agreeable conversation with Dr. Parkman and the two parted

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The Webster Case

• After the Parkman/Webster meeting, no one ever saw Dr. Parkman again.

• The janitor, thinking Webster was guilty,

searched every inch of the medical building.

• In the basement he found a hacked-up body.

• Upon further police investigation, parts of Dr. Parkman were found all over the medical

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The Webster Case

• 150-odd bones were collected from the medical building.

• A team of doctors from Harvard Medical College were called to piece Dr. Parkman back together again.

• Webster was convicted and sentenced to hang

• 100 years later – some experts questioned Webster’s guilt.

• Out of the trial came a set of 10 questions that are used by forensic anthropologists today.

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10 Questions Used Today

1. Are the bones human?

2. How many individuals are represented? 3. How long ago did death occur?

4. What was the person’s age at death? 5. What was the person’s sex?

6. What was the person’s race? 7. What was the person’s height?

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10 Questions Used Today

8. Are there any identifying characteristics, such as old injuries, disease, or unusual features? 9. What was the cause of death?

10. What was the manner of death? (homicide, suicide, accidental, natural, or unknown)

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Characteristics of Bones

• Living tissue!

• Inside contains marrow where the blood cells are made

• Regulated by hormones

• Capable of growth and repair

• Adult has 206 bones – after all of the bones have fully developed

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Is it Human?

Differential Skeletal Anatomy of

Humans and Animals:Cranium

Human

Animal

Large bulbous vault, small face Small vault, large face

Vault relatively smooth Pronounced muscle markings, sagittal crest Inferior

Inferior Foramen Magnum Posterior Foramen Magnum

Chin present Chin absent

Orbits at front, above nasal aperture Orbits at sides, posterior to nasal aperture Minimal nasal and midface projection Significant nasal and midface projection "U"-shaped mandible (no midline

separation)

"V"-shaped mandible (separates at midline)

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Osteology

Human bone –vs- Animal bone

Macroscopic differences

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Macroscopic differences

Baboon femur Human femur

Greater Trocanter

Lesser Trocanter Head

Medail and Lateral epicondyles (patellar

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Microscopic differences

Dinosaur bone thin section

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Osteology

Parts of bone important to know

Ridges

Projections Grooves

References

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