In her novel, The Body Farm, Patricia Cornwell introduces
readers to a "decay research facility" in Knoxville,
Tennessee. "On any given day," Cornwell writes, "its
several wooded acres held dozens of bodies in varying stages of
decomposition."
Given her description, one might think this place is fictional,
but it's not.
As part of the forensic anthropology department at the University
of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT-K), this protected two-and-a-half-acre
field dedicated to the study of decomposing human remains is truly
unique. There's no other place like it in the world.
Although it was the Knoxville cops who first dubbed it the Body
Farm, current faculty members refer to it simply as "the
facility."
Forensic anthropology is the application of physical anthropology
to the medico-legal process. That is, forensic anthropologists
assist law enforcement investigators and medical examiners to
identify human skeletal and decomposing remains, generally working
in cooperation with pathologists and odontologists to estimate the
age, sex, ancestry, stature, and unique bony features of the
deceased. The Knoxville facility has made important
contributions to estimating the time factors involved in suspicious
deaths, but only because its founder realized the dire need for
solid information.
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Investigator with
decomposing body (AP) |
Dr. William M. Bass III, an acclaimed expert on skeletal
identification and now a consultant and UT-K professor emeritus,
single-handedly pioneered this unusual research over thirty years
ago when he discovered that the state of the art in this field was
"mostly anecdotal." In the sixties, Bass had worked
with law enforcement in Kansas, where bodies were generally found
only after they had decomposed into skeletons. Moving to
Tennessee in 1971, where the denser population made it more likely
that bodies would be detected fairly quickly, he saw increasingly
more corpses. "Half of my first ten cases were
maggot-covered bodies," he recalls. "I didn't know
much about that, so I looked through the literature on the subject,
and there wasn't much there." |
"Before our work, no one had ever established a time
line," Bass points out. "There are a lot of factors that
can affect how a body decomposes, but we found that the major two
are climate and insects. When a person dies, the body begins
to decay immediately and the enzymes in the digestive system begin
to eat the tissue. You putrefy, and this gives off a smell.
The first of the critters to be attracted to a decaying body are the
blowflies. They come along and lay their eggs, which hatch
into maggots. The maggots then eat the decaying tissue in a
fairly predictable way." Measuring and recording this
information gave the facility its raison d'être.
Since those early days, the place has changed somewhat.
They still use a few unclaimed bodies, but mostly accept those that
have been donated to science. There's even a waiting list for
people who want to designate the Body Farm as the destination for
their remains.
Dr. Murray K. Marks, an associate professor, is the facility's
current curator and a specialist in facial reconstruction. He
oversees each new project, many of which are run by graduate
students. "Initially there were three to five donations a
year," he says, "and now we get about forty. At any
time, we generally receive about twenty-five bodies in the process
and they stay there for about a year." As each stage of
decomposition is recorded and analyzed, it's added to the growing
data bank that is made available to law enforcement.
Since forensic investigation generally involves using significant
evidence in court, anthropological testimony had to pass the Frye
test, which is the legal standard for admissibility as a scientific
method. Bass and Marks quickly proved the validity of their
approach, and in Marks' experience, "defense attorneys
generally don't question the findings." Last year, for
example, Bass testified in a case in Mississippi in which a man
nearly got away with murder---three times over. It was the
facility staff's analysis of the evidence that trapped him in his
own lie.
In December of 1993, "Big Mike" Rubenstein called 911
to report the deaths of his relatives in a cabin in Summit.
Investigators responded and found the decomposing bodies of a man, a
woman, and a four-year-old child. Rubenstein claimed to have
visited the cabin in mid- and late-November, but had found it empty.
Then he'd come again in December and saw the bodies. It
appeared to be the case of a shocked relative stumbling by accident
into a crime scene, but when Rubenstein quickly tried to collect the
insurance money, investigators grew suspicious. The
accumulated mail and spoiled food also put Rubenstein's tale into
doubt, so they called Dr. Bass and asked him to help construct a
timeline for when the deaths had actually occurred. Bass and
his staff agreed to make an analysis. Based on knowledge of insect
development cycles and rate of decomposition in certain
temperatures, Bass placed the deaths in mid-November---exactly when
Rubenstein had admitted visiting the cabin. Ultimately he was
convicted of the crimes.
Sometimes the research attempts to duplicate the conditions of a
particular crime, but more often experiments are designed for
general data collection that could help in future cases. The more
precisely the researchers can measure decomposition in identifiable
conditions, the more solid is their contribution to solving and
prosecuting a crime.
Thus far, almost three hundred corpses have been used in the
studies. They have been placed in a car trunk, left in direct
sunlight, placed under canvas and plastic, buried in mud, hung from
a scaffold, locked into coffins, refrigerated in the dark, zipped
into body bags, or submerged in water. One may come in
headless, another wounded. One clothed, another naked.
Some are even embalmed. A dead woman, freshly arrived, lies
out in the open on her back, while a pile of bones disintegrates
nearby. Stages of insect infestation on corpses are examined,
along with general exposure to the environment and to small rodent
disturbance.
"Most of what we know about forensic entomology today,"
says Marks, "comes from the baseline studies done here at the
facility."
When there's an ongoing project, the person assigned to it makes
a precise digital record at regular intervals of various aspects of
the disintegration process. He or she may also use an
electronic nose with thirty-two sensors to record changes in the
various odors. These are fed into a gas chromatograph, which
separates and analyzes the distinct parts of compound mixtures.
The hope is to develop sprays that can be used to train cadaver
dogs. Marks and his colleagues at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory are also isolating specific biochemical markers that will
provide precise measurements of the postmortem interval during the
first two weeks after death. If they succeed, law enforcement
will gain a standard of measure unaffected by the many environmental
variables.
The researchers also analyze soil samples, because byproducts of
decomposition seep into the ground. That means that they can
determine how long a body was lying in a particular area, or whether
it was placed somewhere and then moved. They have more such
experiments in mind for the future.
One project will place bodies under concrete to test
ground-penetrating radar technology. "We'll put them
under different thicknesses of concrete," Marks explains,
"and bury them at different depths. We'll also be testing
the difference in results between industrial concrete vs. what
someone might do in their backyard."
Of late, the facility has become as much a teaching as research
center. The professors offer demonstrations to law enforcement
officers, and in fact, Bass himself has trained around one-third of
the practicing anthropologists who currently assist on criminal
cases. The FBI, recognizing the facility's importance, sends
agents for courses on clandestine grave discovery and excavation.
Since different conditions produce different results, Marks and
Bass would both like to see similar facilities open up in other
parts of the country. "We could use one in Florida, one
in Michigan, and one in the desert southwest," Bass insists.
However, in a culture where death is often shunned, it's not so easy
to convince university administrators to support such research.
It may take a few high-profile cases to emphasize to the public the
importance of getting accurate information about time of death.
Let's look at one of the early cases where lack of knowledge
generated a scientific dispute, and then examine in greater detail
the different types of measurements that are used to determine time
of death.
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