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Daphne Emrick

Putting teeth into forensic science - 0 views

  • Livermore researcher Bruce Buchholz and colleagues at the Karolinska Institute are looking at victim's teeth to determine how old they are at the time of death. Using the Lawrence Livermore's Center for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, Buchholz determined that the radioactive carbon-14 produced by above-ground nuclear testing in the 1950s and 1960s remains in the dental enamel, the hardest substance in the body. The radiocarbon analysis showed that dating the teeth with the carbon-14 method would estimate the birth date within one year. Age determination of unknown human bodies is important in the setting of a crime investigation or a mass disaster, because the age at death, birth date, and year of death, as well as gender, can guide investigators to the corr
Lamar Miller

Deaths from tainted cantaloupes rise to 15 - CNN.com - 0 views

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    Dont eat the cantaloupe!!!!!!!!!!!!
Lamar Miller

Comet's Death by Sun Photographed for First Time - Yahoo! News - 0 views

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    Interesting
KiOntey Turner

Chest trauma - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Thoracic trauma is a common cause of significant disability and mortality, the leading cause of death from physical trauma after head and spinal cord injury.[1] Blunt thoracic injuries are the primary or a contributing cause of about a quarter of all trauma-related deaths.
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    Explains the affect of blunt trauma to the chest areas and treatments that can be provided.
Marquise Middleton

News In Brief: Atom & Cosmos - Science News - 0 views

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    A solar sneeze, a superhot planet, the death of a comet and more in this week's news Web edition : Tuesday, July 26th, 2011 Someone should teach the Sun some manners. When it sneezed on June 7, the sun blew an enormous glob of dark plasma into space - and NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory caught it on tape.
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