Spatial Distribution of Soil Geochemistry in Geoforensics


Autoria(s): Ruffell, A.; McKinley, J.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Two common scenarios in Geoforensics (definition in text) are considered: the provenance, or localization of unknown samples and the question of sample variability at scenes of crime/alibi locations. Both have been discussed in forensic and soil science publications, but mostly within a theoretical or non-forensic context. These previous publications provide context for the two case study scenarios (one actual, one based on a range of criminal casework) that consider provenance and variability. A challenging scientific question in geoforensics is the provenance question: ‘where may this sample have come from?’ A question the Tellus data can assist in answering. The question of variation between samples maybe less of a challenge, yet variation between a suspect sample within a scene of crime requires detailed sampling. Variation on a larger (tens to hundreds of kilometres) scale may provide useful intelligence on where a sample came from. To summarise, databases such as Tellus and TellusBorder may be used as effective tools to assist in the search for the origin of displaced soil and sediment

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/spatial-distribution-of-soil-geochemistry-in-geoforensics(56750f8f-7bc3-4a39-af99-20915310614c).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Ruffell , A & McKinley , J 2015 , ' Spatial Distribution of Soil Geochemistry in Geoforensics ' .

Tipo

conferenceObject