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Experimental forensic studies of the preservation of pollen in vehicle fires
Ist Teil von
Science & justice, 2014-03, Vol.54 (2), p.141-145
Ort / Verlag
England: Elsevier Ireland Ltd
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Quelle
Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Abstract The implications of the recent recommendations of the Law Commission regarding the use of admissibility tests have the potential to be far reaching for forensic disciplines that rely on the expertise of highly qualified expert witnesses. These disciplines will need a concomitant body of peer-reviewed experiments that provides a basis for the interpretations of such evidence presented in court. This paper therefore, presents such results from two experiments which were undertaken to address specific issues that were raised in cases presented in the British courtroom. These studies demonstrate that there is a variability in the persistence of Lily, Daffodil and Tulip pollen when exposed to high temperatures between 0.5 min and 1440 min (24 h). It was possible to identify all three pollen types after 30 min of exposure to 400 °C, and after shorter time frames the threshold for successful identification was 700 °C after 0.5 min for all pollen types tested and 500 °C for Daffodil and Lily after 5 min of heat exposure. Over longer time periods (18 h (1080 min)) the different pollen types were found to persist in a viable form for identification at 300 °C (Lily), 200 °C (Daffodil) and 50 °C (Tulip). These findings, albeit from a small sample of pollen types, provide empirical contextual information that would contribute to such evidence having sufficient scientific weight to meet admissibility criteria and be viable evidence for a court. These studies demonstrate the value in seeking pollen evidence from even such extreme crime scenes as encountered in vehicular fires.