Introduction
Death’s Acre: Inside the Legendary Forensic Lab Where the Dead Do Tell Tales is an autobiography by Bill Bass that tells of his experiences as a Forensic Anthropologist. Bass is the founder of the Body Farm at the University of Tennessee Knoxville. Bass established the Body Farm in 1987 after a move from Kansas. Death’s Acre: Inside the Legendary Forensic Lab Where the Dead Do Tell Tales explains the process of identifying the Big Four: sex, age, race, and stature of the newly found skeletons. These allow the officers to narrow it down to a handful of missing people in the area to finally come to a conclusion and a positive identification of the corpse. …show more content…
The change in the pelvis over the years is clear and gives the anthropologists a small range to work with when attempting to identify their skeleton. Adult pelvises are complex; they are made of three rugged bones: the sacrum, the right innominate bone and the left innominate bone. Before puberty both innominate bones consist of three separate bones. From the late teens years until about age fifty, the pelvic bone undergoes dramatic changes that are great for determining age of a …show more content…
Knowing this is one step closer to successfully identifying this corpse.
Key Concept Three: Race The race of a skeleton is not easily identified without the skull, and sometimes this happens. Knowing the race of a corpse is highly valuable in the fact that it once again narrows down the list of possible identities. When identifying race, one way to do so is to look at the mandible of the skull. When looking at the jaw, if the teeth and jawbones extend forward from where the teeth were rooted, it is a common indicator of a Negroid skull; this is called prognathism. If it does not do that, then it is a hallmark for Caucasoid skulls. Identifying race is another stepping stone in narrowing down the list of possible people that this skeleton could be. This narrows the list greatly, cutting out all of the possibilities that are not of that race. Race is an important factor in naming this skeleton, and knowing this is one step closer to knowing who that skeleton