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Based on your anecdotal experience....Do you have any knowledge about that? No I don't. When you were asked about the reliability of residual order do you remember your answer? No I don't.
I think she scares him.
you read what other people have written. you have read the work that other people have done. you are an observer, but as it relates to the research of cadaver dogs you are a reader.
In Texas they are sometimes known as meadow muffins. Looks like tons of them may have hit.:floorlaugh::floorlaugh::floorlaugh:
Yes indeed, that is his only expertise....:floorlaugh:
JB has got to be feeling pretty :sick: green around the gills about now.
Camera just panned to CA as she just popped a gumball in her mouth! :floorlaugh:
Hey Cloud9,Cadaver dogs are trained to specifically find the odor of decomposing *human* remains.
Cadaver dogs are trained to ignore live human scent and animal scent, and only indicate on human remains. These dogs can be used to find human remains related to crime scenes, missing persons cases and forensic evidence related to decomposing human remains.
Cadaster
Cadaver dogs that have special training in the context of disaster scenes and debris (cadaster dogs) can also be used to locate human remains following a natural or manmade disaster. Illinois Search Dogs routinely cross-trains their cadaver dogs to be operational as cadaster dogs as well, to compliment our disaster dog teams.
Water
A specialty subset of cadaver dogs is water cadaver dogs. Similar to cadaver dogs, these dogs have been trained to find the odor of decomposing human remains. However, water cadaver dogs have been specifically trained to locate and indicate the source of the odor to assist divers in a more directed and speedy recovery of a drowning victim.
http://www.illinoissearchdogs.org/capabilities/cadaver_dogs.shtml