About Me

I'm a PhD student researching the role of the archaeological dead in contemporary British society. Think of this as a scrapbook of all the interesting links, snippets of information and random bits and bobs I come across pertaining to death, dying and the dead. Enjoy?!

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Is there a serial killer in your family history? 2.5million criminal records published online
A notorious baby killer and a woman who cut up and boiled her employer are among 2.5 million criminal records published for the first time.
Dating from 1770 to 1934, the findmypast.co.uk archive is the largest collection of rap sheets from England and Wales ever released.
Everything from Edwardian ‘Asbos’, where habitual drunks were banned from pubs, to mugshots, court documents and appeal letters have been made available.
One case history features infamous Amelia Dyer who is thought to have killed 400 babies. The ‘baby farmer’ tricked desperate mothers into thinking she offered a caring home for illegitimate children.
But after pocketing a fee she strangled them with a ribbon and threw their bodies in the Thames. Her crimes went undetected for 16 years until police caught her and she was hanged in 1896.
Another highlighted case has links to TV naturalist Sir David Attenborough. The head of 55-year-old widow Julia Thomas was dug up in the grounds of the derelict Hole in the Wall pub beside his home in Richmond, south-west London, in October 2010. She was murdered in March 1879 by her thieving housekeeper Kate Webster.
She pushed Mrs Thomas down the stairs, strangled her, then chopped up her body and boiled it in a laundry copper.
The documents, taken from the National Archives, also feature newspaper articles which are packed with detail.
‘We have painstakingly published online entire registers containing mugshots of habitual drunks that feature incredible descriptions of criminals’ appearances, demeanour and identifying marks,’ said Debra Chatfield at findmypast.co.uk.

    Is there a serial killer in your family history? 2.5million criminal records published online

    A notorious baby killer and a woman who cut up and boiled her employer are among 2.5 million criminal records published for the first time.

    Dating from 1770 to 1934, the findmypast.co.uk archive is the largest collection of rap sheets from England and Wales ever released.

    Everything from Edwardian ‘Asbos’, where habitual drunks were banned from pubs, to mugshots, court documents and appeal letters have been made available.

    One case history features infamous Amelia Dyer who is thought to have killed 400 babies. The ‘baby farmer’ tricked desperate mothers into thinking she offered a caring home for illegitimate children.

    But after pocketing a fee she strangled them with a ribbon and threw their bodies in the Thames. Her crimes went undetected for 16 years until police caught her and she was hanged in 1896.

    Another highlighted case has links to TV naturalist Sir David Attenborough. The head of 55-year-old widow Julia Thomas was dug up in the grounds of the derelict Hole in the Wall pub beside his home in Richmond, south-west London, in October 2010. She was murdered in March 1879 by her thieving housekeeper Kate Webster.

    She pushed Mrs Thomas down the stairs, strangled her, then chopped up her body and boiled it in a laundry copper.

    The documents, taken from the National Archives, also feature newspaper articles which are packed with detail.

    ‘We have painstakingly published online entire registers containing mugshots of habitual drunks that feature incredible descriptions of criminals’ appearances, demeanour and identifying marks,’ said Debra Chatfield at findmypast.co.uk.

    (Source: metro.co.uk)

    
How Skulls Speak
New 3-D software is helping scientists identify the sex and ancestral origins of human remains with greater speed and precision
Like the detectives on the CBS drama Cold Case, anthropologist Ann H. Ross of North Carolina State University spends many of her days thinking about unsolved crimes. Her most recent work has aimed at developing software that helps forensic scientists determine the sex and ancestry of modern ­human skulls.
Typically forensic scientists measure remains with sliding rulers called calipers. Doing so results in two-dimensional measurements. Ross’s software, called 3D-ID and developed with a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, relies on three-dimensional measurements that scientists take with a digitizer—a computer and stylus. “The stylus allows you to place the coordinates in real space, so you get a better idea of the actual biological form of whatever you’re measuring,” Ross says. 
In a paper published earlier this year Ross and her colleagues found that women’s skulls had grown closer in size to male skulls since the 16th century in a Spanish sample—a finding that likely translates to other population groups. Unlike older forensic software, 3D-ID lets scientists remove the size component in their analysis and look only at shape for a more accurate reading. The photographs at the right show some of the features that 3D-ID uses to determine if a skull belongs to a man or a woman.
Nuchal CrestThis area, where the muscles from the back of the neck attach to the base of the skull, is smooth and rounded in women. Because males have thicker neck muscles than females—and are generally more muscle-marked—this area is more prominent. It is typically rugged and has a hook.
JawA female jaw is often smaller than a man’s and is either pointed or rounded. Males typically have a broad, square jaw.
ForeheadWomen’s foreheads are more vertical than men’s, which gives them a childlike appearance, Ross says. Men tend to have sloping foreheads.
Brow An area called the supraorbital margin, which is just above the eye and roughly follows the brow line, is thin and pointy in women. “If you place your thumb below the outer edge of a woman’s eyebrow, you’ll feel that it’s sharp,” Ross says. Women also have either a small or nonexistent brow ridge. Men, in contrast, have a rounded supraorbital margin, and their brow ridge is more pronounced than women’s.

Great stuff via Scientific American!

    How Skulls Speak

    New 3-D software is helping scientists identify the sex and ancestral origins of human remains with greater speed and precision

    Like the detectives on the CBS drama Cold Case, anthropologist Ann H. Ross of North Carolina State University spends many of her days thinking about unsolved crimes. Her most recent work has aimed at developing software that helps forensic scientists determine the sex and ancestry of modern ­human skulls.

    Typically forensic scientists measure remains with sliding rulers called calipers. Doing so results in two-dimensional measurements. Ross’s software, called 3D-ID and developed with a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, relies on three-dimensional measurements that scientists take with a digitizer—a computer and stylus. “The stylus allows you to place the coordinates in real space, so you get a better idea of the actual biological form of whatever you’re measuring,” Ross says. 

    In a paper published earlier this year Ross and her colleagues found that women’s skulls had grown closer in size to male skulls since the 16th century in a Spanish sample—a finding that likely translates to other population groups. Unlike older forensic software, 3D-ID lets scientists remove the size component in their analysis and look only at shape for a more accurate reading. The photographs at the right show some of the features that 3D-ID uses to determine if a skull belongs to a man or a woman.

    Nuchal Crest
    This area, where the muscles from the back of the neck attach to the base of the skull, is smooth and rounded in women. Because males have thicker neck muscles than females—and are generally more muscle-marked—this area is more prominent. It is typically rugged and has a hook.

    Jaw
    A female jaw is often smaller than a man’s and is either pointed or rounded. Males typically have a broad, square jaw.

    Forehead
    Women’s foreheads are more vertical than men’s, which gives them a childlike appearance, Ross says. Men tend to have sloping foreheads.

    Brow 
    An area called the supraorbital margin, which is just above the eye and roughly follows the brow line, is thin and pointy in women. “If you place your thumb below the outer edge of a woman’s eyebrow, you’ll feel that it’s sharp,” Ross says. Women also have either a small or nonexistent brow ridge. Men, in contrast, have a rounded supraorbital margin, and their brow ridge is more pronounced than women’s.

    Great stuff via Scientific American!