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Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

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Page 1: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Taphonomy

Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Page 2: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Goals of Taphonomy

• Reconstruct paleoenvironments• Determine which factors cause the

differential destruction or attrition of bone• Understand selective transport of remains• Discriminate human from nonhuman agents

of bone modification

Page 3: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Forensic Anthropology and Taphonomy

• Forensic Anthropology shares the last three of these goals, but are also interested in:– decomposition rates and patterns

– disarticulation

– dispersion of body parts

– modification of soft tissue and bone

• In order to show– time and circumstances of death

– postmortem vs. antemortem/perimortem conditions

– identifying factors

Page 4: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Forensic Taphonomy

• Can therefore be described as the use of taphonomic models to – reconstruct postmortem interval– reconstruct conditions before and after

deposition– discriminate the products of human behavior

from those created by the earth’s biological, physical, chemical and geological subsystems

Page 5: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

• Autochthonous– where death occurred

• Allochtonous– different from where death occurred

Page 6: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

A Forensic Taphonomic Model

• Four dimensions– objects

• human remains

– space• on the surface• within other environments (e.g. water)• buried• allocthonous vs. autochthonous

– modification of objects– cultural dimension

• cause and manner• investigator bias

Page 7: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

• Two major temporal concerns– perimortem interval

• includes the timing of specific events such as trauma as they relate to the time of death

– postmortem interval• ordinal (sequence of events)• interval (absolute time)• ratio (relative to some other temporal sequence)

Page 8: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Perimortem Interval

• Estimating time of injury is difficult in the best cases

• Must be able to determine conditions under which certain taphonomic conditions come into play– but these processes are not precise, so the

boundry between life and death becomes blurred

Page 9: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Postmortem Interval

• Also imprecise• After death, the muscles of the body

become flaccid• Within 1-3 hours the muscles become

increasingly rigid and the joints freeze– rigor mortis

• All muscles begin to stiffen simultaneously, but it is noticeable in smaller muscle groups first

Page 10: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Rigor mortis

• Complete rigor takes 10-12 hours to develop under ideal conditions– 70-75 degrees Fahrenheit

• The body remains stiff 24-36 hours• Heavily impacted by temperature and other

environmental conditions, body size, activity prior to death, etc.

Page 11: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”
Page 12: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Livor Mortis

• Also known as lividity• discoloration of the body after death due to

gravitational settling of blood• Usually noticeable approximately 1 hour

postmortem, apparent early often• Becomes fixed in about 8-10 hours• Visible until decomposition changes the

color of the body

Page 13: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”
Page 14: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Algor Mortis

• Normal cooling of a body which takes place as the body equilibrates with the external temperature

• Occurs at an approximate rate of 1.5 degree F an hour– this is obviously dependant on external

temperature

Page 15: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Decomposition

• In general, occurs in stages– after rigor passes, green discoloration of the skin

become evident• generally begins on the abdomen about 24 hours after death

– The body will begin to swell (bloat) due to production of gas by bacteria in the large intestine• may begin within 96 hours after death, sooner if warm or wet

– As the body bloats, the outer layers of the skin begin to slip off the body, as will the hair and nails

Page 16: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

• Also during bloat body fluids may purge through the nose and mouth and other orifices.

• At about the same time, the blood within vessels degenerates and darkens, giving the skin a marbled appearance

Page 17: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”
Page 18: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”
Page 19: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”
Page 20: Taphonomy Defined by Efremov (1940) as “the study of the accumulation and modification of osteological assemblages from a site formation perspective.”

Order of Decomposition

• Intestines, stomach, accessory digestive organs, heart, blood, circulatory system

• air passages and lungs• kidneys and bladder• brain and nervous tissues• skeletal muscles• connective tissues