This podcast episode provides the second half of a conversation with Kyra Stull, an anthropologist and forensic researcher, and Danielle McLeod-Henning, a physical scientist, with host Jim Dawson; a link to part one is provided.
This “Justice Today” podcast episode is part two of a discussion on the resolution of the problem of estimating the age and sex of subadult skeletal remains, through the advancement in understanding of the growth and development patterns in young peoples’ skeletons. Kyra Stull, an anthropologist and forensic researcher at University of Nevada, Reno, along with Danielle McLeod-Henning, a physical scientist at the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), join the host, Jim Dawson, for the episode. The guests discuss their research, including a database called KidStats, which has become an international mother hub for statistical methods aimed at helping improve the subadult (people under 20 years of age) biological profiles. Another tool discussed by the podcasters is the Ontogenetic Subadult Sex Estimation System.
Similar Publications
- Dyed Hair and Swimming Pools: The Influence of Chlorinated and Nonchlorinated Agitated Water on Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopic Analysis of Artificial Dyes on Hair
- Discrimination Between Human and Animal Blood Using Raman Spectroscopy and a Self-Reference Algorithm for Forensic Purposes: Method Expansion and Validation
- Determining Fracture Timing from Microscopic Characteristics of Cortical Bone