I guess I didn’t think 2 months = skeletal remains. But I’m not really familiar with the timelines of such things
Thanks for explaining the location etc
I am familiar with the area and thought of this missing person immediately when I got the news alert today
Also there is a homeless population in the immediate area as well as opioid related issues
Moo
true about the 2 months! if it was warm enough I could see near-skeletonization occurring in 2 months. I agree w/ you that I'm not sold on the UID being FB, with such little information it could be anyone.
for future reference, these are some PMI stats I think are useful!
SAGE Journals: Your gateway to world-class research journals
The 5 stage scale for exposed carcasses (likely tested w/ pig carcasses):
1.
Fresh: no discoloration or insect activity (0–5 days postmortem)
2.
Early decomposition: gray to green discoloration, bloating, postbloating rupture, skin slippage, hair loss (1–21 days postmortem)
3.
Advanced decomposition: moist decomposition of tissues, sagging of flesh, caving in of abdomen, extensive insect activity, bone exposure of less than half of the skeleton, mummification (3 days to 18 months)
4.
Skeletonization: bones with some body fluids present or tissue covering less than half of the skeleton, dry bones (2 months to 9 months)
5.
Extreme decomposition: skeletonization with bleaching or exfoliation or metaphyseal loss or cancellous exposure (6 months to >3 years)
Decomposition - Wikipedia
Casper's ratio is also useful; "if all other factors are equal, then, when there is free access of air (eg on land) a body decomposes twice as fast than if immersed in water and eight times faster than if buried in earth."