|
|
Bitemark Evidence (Forensic Science)
|
Average Rating: (1 Reviews)
|
| Our Price: |
$154.95 |
 |
| Eligible for FREE SHIPPING.
Details
|
| Availability: |
|
Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Publisher: |
|
CRC Press |
| Date: |
|
November 1, 2004 |
| Binding: |
|
Hardcover |
| Pages: |
|
680 |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
From our affiliated sellers:
|
|
7 Used from $110.00
|
|
|
11 New from $132.78
|
|
|
Add Your Own Review
|
| |
 |
| |
| Product Description: |
|
 |
| |
| The first stand-alone textbook on the subject, this reference compiles the expertise and recommendations of a team of 21 eminent specialists from the disciplines of forensic odontology, DNA analysis, pathology, and jurisprudence to illustrate the many facets of bitemark recognition, diagnosis, handling, excision, lifting, transillumination, storage, preservation, transportation, analysis, and comparison. With more than 543 black and white photographs and 32 full-color pages, the book illustrates animal and human bitemarks on the living, the deceased, and on objects, incorporating sections on the history of bitemark evidence, salivary DNA, genotypic comparison of oral bacteria, and more. |
| |
 |
| |
| Customers' Reviews: |
|
|
Take a bite out of this book, October 29, 2005 |
 |
Other odontology texts devote a mere few pages or maybe a chapter on bitemark evidence. This book is solely devoted to bitemarks and contains everything that you wanted to know about the topic, including minutae that would make an odontologist's toes curl. The text begins with a rather detailed history of landmark cases that used bitemark evidence to identify perpetrators of a crime (see Ted Bundy). The rest of the book takes the reader through the sequential process of bitemark identification, from the anatomy and physiology of bitemarks to the technical aspects of gathering, studying, and interpreting data from a typical bitemark case. The book is laden with color and b/w photos. There is also a very detailed section on presentation of bitemark evidence in court, as well as the controversial topic of reliability of bitemark data as the sole means of positively identifying criminals in a court of law. Indeed, the book is concept-heavy and overly detailed for the conventional forensics enthusiast (they may, dare I write it, find it a boring read); but if you're in the profession of forensics, whether it is pathology, odontology, or anthropology, or are thinking about pursuing it down the road, this book would serve as a terrific resource in your forensics armamentarium.
|
| 4 of 4 people found the above review helpful. |
| |
 |
| |
|
|