Byrnes Jennifer F, Belcher William R
Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 4505 S. Maryland Pkwy., Las Vegas, NV 89154-5003, United States.
Department of Anthropology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 816 Oldfather Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588-0368, United States.
Sci Justice. 2021 Nov;61(6):723-734. doi: 10.1016/j.scijus.2021.09.002. Epub 2021 Sep 9.
Knowledge of the behavior of local fauna can aid forensic investigators in developing awareness of site formation processes. In Hawai'i, little has been published on the effects of feral domestic pig (Sus scrofa) and feral domestic dog (Canis familiaris) scavenging and bone dispersal on field recovery and laboratory observations. In this Pacific tropical setting, the most consequential terrestrial taphonomic agents are pigs and dogs, both in terms of hard tissue modification and dispersal of remains across the landscape. In 2017, an archaeologist discovered the remains of an unidentified decedent on the island of Kaua'i, State of Hawai'i during a cultural resource management survey. Subsequently, a forensic recovery team in conjunction with Kaua'i police and crime scene investigators used archaeological techniques, including pedestrian survey, tape-and-compass, and GPS mapping, to map and recover the remains. A feral pig trail transected various areas of the recovery site and corresponded with the distribution pattern of recovered skeletal material, including both the main concentration more broadly dispersed skeletal elements. While much of the skeleton was present, missing or unrecovered skeletal elements are consistent with expectations based on existing literature. Much of the postmortem bone deformations were characteristic of marks related to feral dog and/or feral pig scavenging. These results assisted local investigators in deciding the manner of death, as well as providing the family with an accounting of the decedent's remains for burial. Thus, forensic anthropologists and archaeologists need to understand and develop knowledge of local animal behavior to recover and interpret human remains of medicolegal significance.
了解当地动物的行为有助于法医调查人员认识遗址形成过程。在夏威夷,关于野生家猪(野猪)和野生家犬(家犬) scavenging 以及骨骼散布对野外遗骸发现和实验室观察的影响,发表的相关内容很少。在这个太平洋热带环境中,无论是在硬组织改变还是遗骸在景观中的散布方面,最重要的陆地埋藏学因素都是猪和狗。2017年,一名考古学家在夏威夷州考艾岛的一次文化资源管理调查中发现了一具身份不明死者的遗骸。随后,一个法医回收小组与考艾岛警方和犯罪现场调查人员一起,使用了包括徒步调查、卷尺和罗盘测量以及GPS测绘等考古技术,来绘制和回收遗骸。一条野猪踪迹横穿了回收地点的各个区域,与回收的骨骼材料的分布模式相对应,包括更广泛分散的主要集中骨骼元素。虽然大部分骨骼都存在,但缺失或未回收的骨骼元素与现有文献的预期相符。许多死后骨骼变形具有与野狗和/或野猪 scavenging 相关痕迹的特征。这些结果帮助当地调查人员确定死亡方式,并为家属提供死者遗骸用于埋葬的情况说明。因此,法医人类学家和考古学家需要了解并掌握当地动物行为的知识,以回收和解读具有法医学意义的人类遗骸。 (注:原文中“scavenging”未准确翻译,可结合语境理解为“啃食、觅食遗骸等行为” )