positivevibes
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Brilliant first post. Great info Abbstar007!! :goodpost:
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/ka...y/news-story/e5140ff6f5cc1d49d115942a01e289ad
On Monday, Dean approached police directly at the taped area of Loch Rd where the body was found.
“I would have no problem standing up in a court of law and repeating what I saw,” Dean said.
“I’m quite convinced."
“My only purpose for coming forward to speak to the media is not to get publicity but to make sure the person responsible is caught — to make sure there is justice.”
The local dad and businessman also reported seeing bags of concrete and lime.
Also in July, News photographer Jay Town was walking in bush on the side of Loch Rd, about 40m from where the body would be found, when he came across empty bottles of industrial strength fertiliser.
Feeling uneasy, he phoned police then, and spoke to detectives this week.
http://www.thecorpseproject.net/decompositionscience/
Much research on how animal decomposition affects the soil takes place to help with analysing crime or archaeological scenes. Moisture, temperature and the nature of the soil are key factors in the rate of decay and, if these are understood and taken into account, the forensic scientist can work out how long the body has been there. Soil bacteria and chemical changes are also of interest to the forensic world – what they are and how long they have been there – because these changes can also suggest how long remains have been in place, influencing the microbial and chemical composition of the soil.
http://www.redcross.int/en/eric/eric/screen%20tome%201/09WATscreen/406DCHPLIMEQP5.pdf
Quick lime is used for covering of decomposing organic matters in order to avoid putrefaction smells and attraction of flies and various type scavengers.
On corpses: If deep burial is not possible, first spread quick lime in the pit, then place the corpse and cover it with quick lime (1kg of lime per 10kg of corpse weight).
LINK ORIGINALLY POSTED BY TGY :tyou:
https://bonesdontlie.wordpress.com/2013/08/08/new-morbid-terminology-quicklime/
Quicklime does have uses for burials. In the Red Cross Emergency Relief Items Catalogue, quicklime and lime are listed as a tool for aiding in proper disposal of human remains that cannot be afforded a deep burial. However, the goal of the product is not to destroy the body but rather to prevent putrefaction that create odor, and attracts flies and animals.
Lime is one of the major finds in many forensics cases dealing with clandestine burials due to this popular notion of its ability to remove the identity of the deceased and destroy the remains. A new study by Schotsmans et al. (2012) used pig corpses to test different types of lime to see how it changed the remains. The pigs were put into graves, covered with different types and amounts of lime, buried, and were left for six months. Two pigs were buried with lime as the control group. The pigs buried without lime were mostly skeletonized and highly decayed, the two pigs buried with hydrated lime were very well preserved and had little decay, and the two pigs buried with quicklime were fairly preserved with some decay within the body. In general, they discovered that the lime was highly effective in preventing decay and protecting the body, rather than destroying it.
The logs Karen was buried between does resemble a shallow pit, which would have aided the use of lime in the burial, if used. If lime was used by Borce, he didn't research the forensics enough to understand it would preserve, not destroy and remove Karen's identity.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/ka...y/news-story/e5140ff6f5cc1d49d115942a01e289ad
On Monday, Dean approached police directly at the taped area of Loch Rd where the body was found.
“I would have no problem standing up in a court of law and repeating what I saw,” Dean said.
“I’m quite convinced."
“My only purpose for coming forward to speak to the media is not to get publicity but to make sure the person responsible is caught — to make sure there is justice.”
The local dad and businessman also reported seeing bags of concrete and lime.
Also in July, News photographer Jay Town was walking in bush on the side of Loch Rd, about 40m from where the body would be found, when he came across empty bottles of industrial strength fertiliser.
Feeling uneasy, he phoned police then, and spoke to detectives this week.
http://www.thecorpseproject.net/decompositionscience/
Much research on how animal decomposition affects the soil takes place to help with analysing crime or archaeological scenes. Moisture, temperature and the nature of the soil are key factors in the rate of decay and, if these are understood and taken into account, the forensic scientist can work out how long the body has been there. Soil bacteria and chemical changes are also of interest to the forensic world – what they are and how long they have been there – because these changes can also suggest how long remains have been in place, influencing the microbial and chemical composition of the soil.
http://www.redcross.int/en/eric/eric/screen%20tome%201/09WATscreen/406DCHPLIMEQP5.pdf
Quick lime is used for covering of decomposing organic matters in order to avoid putrefaction smells and attraction of flies and various type scavengers.
On corpses: If deep burial is not possible, first spread quick lime in the pit, then place the corpse and cover it with quick lime (1kg of lime per 10kg of corpse weight).
LINK ORIGINALLY POSTED BY TGY :tyou:
https://bonesdontlie.wordpress.com/2013/08/08/new-morbid-terminology-quicklime/
Quicklime does have uses for burials. In the Red Cross Emergency Relief Items Catalogue, quicklime and lime are listed as a tool for aiding in proper disposal of human remains that cannot be afforded a deep burial. However, the goal of the product is not to destroy the body but rather to prevent putrefaction that create odor, and attracts flies and animals.
Lime is one of the major finds in many forensics cases dealing with clandestine burials due to this popular notion of its ability to remove the identity of the deceased and destroy the remains. A new study by Schotsmans et al. (2012) used pig corpses to test different types of lime to see how it changed the remains. The pigs were put into graves, covered with different types and amounts of lime, buried, and were left for six months. Two pigs were buried with lime as the control group. The pigs buried without lime were mostly skeletonized and highly decayed, the two pigs buried with hydrated lime were very well preserved and had little decay, and the two pigs buried with quicklime were fairly preserved with some decay within the body. In general, they discovered that the lime was highly effective in preventing decay and protecting the body, rather than destroying it.
The logs Karen was buried between does resemble a shallow pit, which would have aided the use of lime in the burial, if used. If lime was used by Borce, he didn't research the forensics enough to understand it would preserve, not destroy and remove Karen's identity.