Geology & Geochemistry Cluster, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Co van Ledden Hulsebosch Centre (CLHC), Science Park 904, 1098 XH, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Geology & Geochemistry Cluster, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Forensic Sci Int. 2020 Jul;312:110336. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2020.110336. Epub 2020 May 19.
Multi-isotope analysis (e.g., Sr-Pb-O-H-C-N) of human scalp hair is routinely used in forensic investigations of human remains to constrain the geographic origin of unidentified bodies, and to investigate antemortem mobility patterns. However, while it is known that postmortem processes can affect the preservation of, or even overprint, the biogenic isotopic signatures in hair, the speed and nature of these processes have rarely been studied. This study investigates the effects of decomposition and environment on the H-Pb-Sr isotope compositions of human hair as well as the relationship between structural hair shaft degradation and isotopic signature change over time. Human scalp hair samples from four body donations were collected at different stages throughout gross body decomposition. The willed-donated bodies were placed to decompose outdoors at the Forensic Anthropology Research Facility (FARF) at Texas State University. Hair fibers from two of the donations were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and high-resolution light microscopy (HRLM). Chemical and microbiological degradation of hair fibers occurred rapidly after placement of the body outdoors. Measurements of scalp hair isotopic composition demonstrated that H-Pb-Sr isotope ratios were altered within days after environmental exposure, presumably by deposition, leaching and/or exchange with the local bioavailable soil, and vapor. The degree of physical hair degradation and changes in H-Pb-Sr isotope composition were not correlated. We conclude that antemortem isotopic H-Pb-Sr isotope ratios are difficult to recover in hairs derived from decomposing whole bodies.
多同位素分析(例如 Sr-Pb-O-H-C-N)通常用于法医研究人类遗骸,以限制不明尸体的地理来源,并调查生前的迁移模式。然而,虽然已知死后过程会影响头发中生物成因同位素特征的保存,甚至会对其进行覆盖,但这些过程的速度和性质很少被研究过。本研究调查了分解和环境对人发 H-Pb-Sr 同位素组成的影响,以及结构毛发轴随时间降解与同位素特征变化之间的关系。从四个尸体捐赠者的头皮上采集了不同分解阶段的毛发样本。这些捐赠的尸体被放置在德克萨斯州立大学法医人类学研究设施(FARF)户外进行分解。从其中两个捐赠者的头发纤维中使用扫描电子显微镜(SEM)和高分辨率光学显微镜(HRLM)进行了检查。头发纤维的化学和微生物降解在将尸体放置在户外后迅速发生。头皮毛发同位素组成的测量表明,H-Pb-Sr 同位素比值在环境暴露后的几天内就发生了变化,这可能是由于与当地可利用土壤和蒸气的沉积、浸出和/或交换所致。物理毛发降解的程度和 H-Pb-Sr 同位素组成的变化没有相关性。我们得出结论,难以从分解的整个尸体中获取生前同位素 H-Pb-Sr 同位素比值。