Scene Recovery and Taphonomy
Trauma Biomechanics and Timing
Projectile and Gunshot Trauma
Blunt, Sharp, and Thermal Trauma
Child Abuse, Odontology, and Mass Fatalities
100

What is forensic anthropology?

The use of archaeological methods to recover and document evidence/remains in medicolegal cases.

100

What is trauma?

Physical disruption of living tissue by outside forces.

100

What is high velocity projectile trauma?

Trauma caused by a rapid force over a small surface area, usually from bullets or shrapnel.

100

What is blunt force trauma?

Trauma from a low-velocity impact over a large surface area.

100

What is a skeletal survey?

A full-body set of X-rays used to look for fractures or skeletal injuries, especially in child abuse investigations.


200

What is the difference between a surface scatter and a burial?

Surface scatter means remains are on top of the ground and may be dispersed; burial means remains are underground and usually more contained.

200

What is the yield point?

The point where bone stops deforming elastically and begins permanent/plastic deformation.

200

What is internal beveling usually associated with?

An entrance wound in the skull.

200

What is patterned trauma?

Trauma where the shape or pattern of the object is visible on the injured tissue or bone.

200

Name one red flag for non-accidental trauma in children.

Multiple fractures in different stages of healing, fractures inconsistent with the caretaker’s story, metaphyseal fractures, or long bone fractures in non-ambulatory children.

300

What is algor mortis?

The cooling of the body after death.

300

What is the difference between elastic and plastic deformation?

Elastic deformation is temporary; plastic deformation is permanent.

300

What is external beveling usually associated with?

An exit wound in the skull.

300

What are radiating fractures?

Fractures that spread outward from the point of impact.

300

Why is dental identification useful?

Teeth are durable and dental records can be compared between antemortem and postmortem evidence.

400

What are accumulated degree days used for?

Estimating time since death by adding up heat exposure over time.

400

What are the three trauma timing categories?

Antemortem, perimortem, and postmortem.

400

What is a keyhole defect?

A projectile wound with both entrance and exit features, usually caused by a bullet striking at a shallow angle.

400

What is sharp force trauma?

Trauma from a low-velocity force over a small surface area, usually from a sharp tool or weapon.

400

What is a mass fatality?

An event where more deaths occur than local resources can handle.

500

What is Total Body Score used for?

Estimating PMI by scoring decomposition changes in different body regions.

500

How can you tell antemortem trauma from perimortem trauma?

Antemortem trauma shows healing; perimortem trauma happens around death and usually has fresh/wet bone fracture characteristics.

500

Can caliber be determined exactly from defect size in bone?

No, defect size can be influenced by many factors, so caliber cannot be determined exactly from bone defect size alone.

500

What is pugilistic pose?

A heat-related body position caused by muscle contraction during burning, where arms and legs flex.

500

Name the 5 major operations of a mass fatality response.

Search and recovery, examination of remains, gathering antemortem information, identification of decedents, and issuing death certificates/releasing remains.

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