在致命火灾现场开展人类遗骸调查:美国人类学与消防科学的桥梁

Hanna Friedlander, Jaymelee J. Kim, Joe Allen
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摘要

对火灾现场致命受害者的人类学评估对于搜索、恢复和鉴定与火灾有关的死亡调查中的遗骸至关重要。人类学家在现场的工作包括但不限于在被烧毁的建筑物、车辆、路边垃圾堆、篝火事故和其他火灾调查中搜寻遗骸,以及妥善记录和收集遗骸。虽然所有火灾事件的模式和顺序没有统一标准,但可以对热改变进行分类,并使用一致的术语来反映热改变遗骸的共性和评估。此外,人类学家有能力根据可能的相关创伤(如死前、死后)来评估遗骸的损坏情况。然而,现场调查人员并不经常要求人类学家到现场提供协助,他们往往不知道人类学家在现场的贡献和好处。这篇透视文章重点介绍了美国致命火灾调查的发展、关键术语以及人类学科学中的核心概念,并就火灾调查人员和人类学家如何合作缩小两个领域之间的差距提出了建议。这篇综述结合了火灾科学、人类学和火灾调查的文献,强调了人类学和火灾调查人员合作的重要性。本文被归类为:法医人类学 > 岩石学变化与环境法医人类学 > 创伤分析法医人类学 > 大规模灾难和战争犯罪背景下的人类学。
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Development of human remains investigations at fatal fire scenes: Bridging anthropology and fire sciences in the United States
Anthropological assessment of a scene for fatal fire victims can prove crucial in the search, recovery and identification of human remains from fire‐related death investigations. On scene contributions of the anthropologist include, but are not limited to, searching for remains in burnt structures, vehicles, roadside dumps, campfire accidents, and other fire investigations, as well as the proper documentation and collection of remains. While patterning and sequencing for all fire events is not standardized, thermal alteration can be classified and consistent terminology can be used to reflect commonalities and evaluation of thermally altered remains. Further, the anthropologist has the ability to evaluate damage to the remains in terms of possible associated trauma (e.g., antemortem, postmortem). However, scene investigators do not regularly call upon anthropologists to assist at the scene and often do not know the contributions and benefits of having an anthropologist on scene. This perspective article focuses on the development of fatal fire investigations within the United States, key terminology, and core concepts within anthropological sciences and provides recommendations for how fire investigators and anthropologists can collaborate–bridging the gap between the two fields. Uniting literature from fire science, anthropology, and fire investigations, this overview underscores the importance of anthropology and fire investigator collaboration.This article is categorized under: Forensic Anthropology > Taphonomic Changes and the Environment Forensic Anthropology > Trauma Analysis Forensic Anthropology > Anthropology in Mass Disaster & War Crime Contexts
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