Terms Defined
One-Word Answers
Periods of Forensic Anthropology
Where in the body is the bone?
Type of Remains
100

the application of anthropological methods and theory to matters of legal concern, particularly as they relate to the recovery and analysis of the skeleton

forensic anthropology

100

Only bone in the body that does not articulate (connect) with any other bone

hyoid

100

limited to anatomists and some physical anthropologists working on dry bones with no formal methods

Pre-1940

100
patella

lower limb

100

yellow (greasy) with desiccated tissues and composite resin dental fillings

modern

200

modern name for the subfield of anthropology that deals with human evolution, primates, comparative anatomy, and population variation

biological anthropology

200

famous court case _________v. United States that established the "general scientific acceptance" standard

Frye

200

field recovery and laboratory analysis of human remains ranging from recently deceased individuals to skeletal remains in academic or medical examiner settings

1900-present

200

sphenoid

cranium
200

skull, shiny texture, hole at bregma with hardware attaching mandible 

anatomical remains

300

application of archaeological theory and methods to the resolution of medicolegal & humanitarian issues

forensic archaeology

300

acronym for response teams of varied on-call personnel assisting with mass disasters/mass fatality incidents in each of the 10 US regions 

DMORT

300

development of biological profile methods resulting from interest from the military 

1940-1970

300

trapezium

wrist (upper limb)

300

skeletonized, sun-bleached, with knee replacement

modern

400

the study of processes affecting the body during and following death that affect how and where it is found

forensic taphonomy

400

type of data that is quick and often highly effective at capturing information that is not easily measured, but is more heavily reliant on experience and prone to bias

macroscopic

400
the physical anthropology section of the AAFS and the American Board of Forensic Anthropology were founded

1970-1990

400

talus

ankle (lower limb)

400

military-aged male, Asian ancestry, high-velocity trauma to skull

souvenir / trophy skull 

500

organization managed by NIST that replaced the SWGs to develop technically sounds forensic science standards and promote their adoption by the forensic science community 

Organization of Scientific Area Committees for Forensic Science (OSAC)

500

Phase of archaeological recovery: systematic recovery & preservation of context to reconstruct the death event, decomposition of the body, and taphonomic modifications

Phase 3: Recovery & Documentation

500

the "father of forensic anthropology" published The Identification of the Human Skeleton: A Medicolegal Study

the "father of forensic anthropology" published The Identification of the Human Skeleton: A Medicolegal Study

500

sacrum

thorax

500

soil stained, root etching, cranial modification, shovel-shaped incisors 

archaeological (prehistoric Native American)

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