Basics & Site Finding - Digging Deep
- Forensic Archaeology: Applying archaeological methods to medico-legal death investigations, primarily for locating & recovering human remains.
- Key Principles:
- Stratigraphy: "Law of Superposition" - older layers are deeper. Crucial for dating & sequence.
- Association: Relationship between objects found together.
- Context: Precise location & surroundings of evidence.
- Site Finding Methods:
- Surface Indicators: Disturbed vegetation, soil discoloration/compaction, depressions, unusual animal/insect activity.
- Remote Sensing: Aerial/satellite imagery (e.g., crop marks, soil marks).
- Geophysical Surveys:
- Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR): Detects subsurface anomalies/disturbances.
- Magnetometer: Detects magnetic disturbances (e.g., buried metal, fired areas).

⭐ Taphonomic changes (post-mortem alterations) and their environmental indicators are crucial for estimating Post-Mortem Interval (PMI) and understanding site formation processes (e.g., burial vs. surface deposition).
Excavation Techniques - Layer by Layer
- Site Preparation:
- Establish Grid System: Divide site into squares (e.g., 1x1m or 2x2m).
- Datum Point: A fixed, stable reference point for all 3D measurements (X, Y, Z coordinates) of finds and features.
- Controlled Excavation Methods:
- Stratigraphic Excavation: Follows natural soil layers (strata). Based on the Law of Superposition (older layers are deeper).
- Wheeler-Kenyon Method: Grid-based, excavates squares leaving baulks (unexcavated walls) between them to preserve a record of stratigraphy.
- Arbitrary Level Excavation: Used when strata are indistinct; soil removed in fixed depths (e.g., 5-10 cm).
- Process & Documentation:
- Expose finds in situ (in their original position).
- Detailed recording: Notes, photographs, sketches for each layer and find.
- Sieving: All excavated soil is sieved to recover small items (bone fragments, teeth, artifacts).
- Bagging & Tagging: Each piece of evidence is individually bagged, labeled with provenience (precise location) and date.
⭐ The principle of association is paramount: the relationship of remains to other evidence and their position in the strata provides crucial contextual information for interpretation.
Recovery & Documentation - Bag & Tag
- Principle: Meticulous in-situ recovery of human remains & associated evidence (artifacts, ecofacts).
- "Bag & Tag" Protocol:
- Each item (bone, tooth, artifact, soil sample) individually collected.
- Placed in a new, appropriate bag.
- Securely sealed.
- Tagged with unique identifier & detailed information:
- Case number, date, time
- Precise 3D location (grid, depth)
- Item description
- Collector's details
- Modern Integration:
- Advanced Imaging: 3D surface scanning, CT, MRI for non-invasive in-situ documentation.
- Digital Enhancement: Virtual reconstruction complements traditional methods.
- AI Applications: Machine learning automates pattern detection, improves diagnostic accuracy.
- Comprehensive Documentation:
- Mapping: Plan & profile views (datum points).
- Photography/Videography: Overall, mid-range, close-ups (with scale); continuous recording.
- Field Notes: Detailed log of procedures, findings, context.
- Chain of Custody: Maintained rigorously per BSA evidence standards.
⭐ Soil samples from beneath and around the remains are crucial; they should be bagged and tagged separately for entomological, botanical, and trace evidence analysis.
Post-Excavation Steps - Lab Groundwork
- Transport: Secure evidence transfer; maintain rigorous chain of custody per BSA requirements for evidence integrity and admissibility.
- Sieving Soil:
- Dry: For loose soil; flexible mesh sizes (commonly 1/4" to 1/16", adjusted per context).
- Wet: For clay/wet soil; water-assisted. Crucial for small items.
- Cleaning Remains:
- Primarily dry brushing (soft brushes, dental picks).
- Advanced techniques: Distilled water rinses, specialized solutions under controlled conditions.
- CT/3D scanning for pre-cleaning documentation.
- Sorting & Segregation:
- Human vs. non-human.
- By skeletal element.
- Associated artifacts (e.g., bullets, jewelry).
- Inventory & Documentation:
- Detailed cataloging with sterile conditions and biosafety protocols.
- Assign unique identifiers per BNSS evidence procedures.
- Photography and digital imaging.
⭐ Wet sieving is vital for recovering minute evidence like dental fragments, small hand/foot bones, or projectiles often missed otherwise.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Stratigraphy (Law of Superposition) guides relative dating of remains and associated evidence.
- A Grid System allows precise 3D mapping and recording of evidence provenience.
- Maintaining Context (spatial relationship of remains to surroundings) is vital for interpretation.
- Systematic Excavation in controlled layers (natural/arbitrary) preserves invaluable context.
- Sieving (dry/wet) of excavated soil helps find small bones, teeth, and micro-artifacts.
- Meticulous documentation (notes, photographs, maps) throughout the process is essential.
- Taphonomy interprets post-mortem changes, burial environment, and aids PMI estimation.
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