Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine and the Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, 57-83 Kavanagh St, Southbank, VIC 3006, Australia.
Forensic Sci Int. 2011 Feb 25;205(1-3):29-35. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2010.07.038. Epub 2010 Aug 24.
This paper briefly describes Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) and reviews the history of the use of forensic anthropology in the identification process. The potential contributions made by forensic anthropology are illustrated through the presentation of a case study. In February 2009 the state of Victoria in south-eastern Australia experienced the most devastating bushfires in its history, resulting in catastrophic loss of life and public and private property. Within 48h of the disaster, forensic teams including pathologists, odontologists and anthropologists assembled at the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine in Melbourne to begin the task of identifying the deceased. This paper reviews the part played by forensic anthropologists in the identification process and outlines the important contribution anthropologists can make to DVI, especially at the scene, in the mortuary and in the reconciliation process. The anthropologist's experience with differentially preserved human remains meant they played an important role identifying and recovering heavily fragmentary human skeletal remains, differentiating human from non-human remains, establishing basic biological information such as the sex and age of the individuals and confirming or denying the possibility of re-associating body parts for release to families.
本文简要描述了灾难遇难者身份识别(DVI),并回顾了法医人类学在识别过程中的应用历史。通过案例研究展示了法医人类学的潜在贡献。2009 年 2 月,澳大利亚东南部的维多利亚州遭遇了历史上最具破坏性的丛林大火,造成生命和公共及私人财产的灾难性损失。灾难发生后 48 小时内,包括病理学家、牙科学家和人类学家在内的法医小组在墨尔本的维多利亚法医研究所聚集,开始对死者进行身份识别。本文回顾了法医人类学家在识别过程中所扮演的角色,并概述了人类学家在 DVI 中可以做出的重要贡献,尤其是在现场、太平间和协调过程中。人类学家对保存状态不同的人类遗骸的经验意味着他们在识别和找回严重破碎的人类骨骼遗骸、区分人类遗骸与非人类遗骸、确定个体的基本生物信息(如性别和年龄)以及确认或否认重新组合身体部位以释放给家属的可能性方面发挥了重要作用。