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Soil, forensic examination materials

Soils can have characteristics due to human activity (anthropogenic soils). The forensic examination of soil is therefore not only concerned with the analysis of naturally occurring rocks, minerals, plant, and animal matter it also includes the detection of such manufactured materials as ions from synthetic fertilizers and from different environments (e.g., nitrate, phosphate, sulfate) and environmental artifacts (e.g., lead or objects such as glass, paint chips, asphalt, brick fragments, and cinders). Each of these materials can represent distinct soil characteristics. When unique particles are found in soil evidence, more precise and rapid discrimination can be achieved even if the amount of evidence recovered is microscopic (Sugita and Marumo 2004). For this reason, microscopy is often considered the most useful technique for the detection of such characteristic particles. [Pg.276]


See other pages where Soil, forensic examination materials is mentioned: [Pg.280]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.777]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.284 ]




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