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"That introduced huge amounts of radioactive carbon into the atmosphere, and subsequently us," explained Douglas Ubelaker, a forensic anthropologist at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. With the increase in radioactive carbon during the tests and its decline after testing was stopped, researchers were able to develop a "bomb curve" for the amount that might be found in the body of an individual. Body cells are continually being replaced -- faster in soft tissues, more slowly in bones and teeth
-- and comparing the ratios allows for the estimation of someone's date of death and, possibly, their date of birth, Ubelaker said. Analyzing small particles recovered from fires and explosions can also be a challenge, according to Ubelaker, who serves as an FBI consultant. New scanning electron spectroscopy methods have produced comparison data to determine if particles are bone or something else before researchers attempt DNA analysis, he said. And a technique called radio immuno assay can be used to determine if a piece of bone or tooth is human, he added, solving the problem that simply looking at bone through a microscope can't always answer. Researchers also are working to improve analysis of explosive powders based on their chemical composition, and size and shape of the powder granules used in pipe bombs, said Bill MacCrehan, who performs trace forensic chemical analysis at the National Institutes of Standards and Technology. ___ On the Net: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/
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