2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)
Session No. 168 Tuesday, 24 October 2006
1:30 PM-5:30 PM, Pennsylvania Convention Center: 113 C

T124. Forensic Geoscience: In Practice and in Teaching

Elisa Bergslien and Nehru E. Cherukupalli, Presiding
 Paper #Start Time
168-11:30 PM SHERLOCK HOLMES TO THE PRESENT-PROGRESS IN FORENSIC GEOLOGY: MURRAY, Raymond, Geology, University of Montana, 106 Ironwood Pl, Missoula, MT 59803, rmurray@bresnan.net
168-21:50 PM DEVELOPING FORENSIC INVESTIGATIVE LEADS THROUGH THE MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF TRACE EVIDENCE: PALENIK, Skip and PALENIK, Christopher S., Microtrace LLC, 1750 Grandstand Place, Elgin, IL 60123-4900, spalenik@microtracescientific.com
168-32:05 PM NOVEL GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR APPLICATIONS FOR SCENES OF CRIME MAPPING: RUFFELL, Alastair, School of Geography, Archaeology & Palaeoecology, Queens University, Belfast, Elmwood Avenue, Belfast BT7 1NN Ireland, a.ruffell@qub.ac.uk
168-42:25 PM FORENSIC SOIL ANALYSES APPLIED TO THE LAURA M. HOMICIDE CASE: DI MAGGIO, Rosa Maria and NUCCETELLI, Leonardo, Italian Forensic Science Police Department, Mininster of Interior, Via Tuscolana, 1556, Rome, 00100, Italy, rosamaria_dimaggio@hotmail.com
168-52:40 PM ISOTOPIC AND ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS FOR THE FORENSICS AND ATTRIBUTION OF BIOLOGICAL AGENTS: HORITA, Juske1, LAVELLE, Mark2, RICIPUTI, Lee R.2, DUCKWORTH, Douglas C.2, BOSTICK, Debra A.2, BÜRGER, Stefan2, BRANDT, Craig C.2, and KREUZER, Helen3, (1) Oak Ridge National Laboratory, PO Box 2008, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6110, horitaj@ornl.gov, (2) Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6375, (3) Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA 99352
168-62:55 PM THE FORENSIC DISCONNECT: RESEARCH V REAL WORLD: BOTTRELL, Maureen C., Laboratory Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Trace Evidence Unit, 2501 Investigation Parkway, Quantico, VA 22135, maureen.bottrell@ic.fbi.gov
168-73:15 PM XRD AND CREMATED HUMAN REMAINS: WHAT IS IN THIS URN ANYHOW ?: BERGSLIEN, Elisa, Earth Sciences and Science Education, Buffalo State College, 1300 Elmwood Ave, 271 Science Building, Buffalo, NY 14222, bergslet@buffalostate.edu
168-83:30 PM TEACHING CRITICAL OBSERVATION WITH FORENSIC GEOLOGY: CRELLING, John C., Department of Geology, Southern Illinois University, MS 4324, Carbondale, IL 62901, jcrelling@geo.siu.edu
168-93:45 PM OUTLINE AND GOALS FOR A CONTEMPORARY FORENSIC GEOLOGY COURSE: ISPHORDING, Wayne C., Earth Sciences, University of South Alabama, LSCB 136, Mobile, AL 36688, wisphord@jaguar1.usouthal.edu
168-104:00 PM TOOLS IN THE TOOLBOX: INSTRUMENTATION IN THE FORENSIC GEOLOGY CLASSROOM: WILLIAMS, Thomas J., Department of Geological Sciences, University of Idaho, PO Box 443025, Moscow, ID 83844, tomw@uidaho.edu
168-114:15 PM TELL-TALE SAND GRAINS IN FORENSIC WORK: NEHRU, C.E., Brooklyn College, Graduate School–CUNY, (Hofstra University, American Museum of Natural History, Asian American/Asian Research Institute), Brooklyn, NY 11210, Nehru@Brooklyn.cuny.edu
168-124:30 PM MURDER (MOST FOUL!): BUNDY, Maria E., Severn-Trent Laboratories, 900 Lakeside Drive, Mobile, AL 36609, bundy1624@bellsouth.net and ISPHORDING, Wayne C., Earth Sciences, University of South Alabama, LSCB 136, Mobile, AL 36688
168-134:45 PM ESTABLISHING THE PROVENANCE OF SURFACE SAMPLES IN FORENSIC INVESTIGATIONS: RIDING, James B., RAWLINS, Barry G., KEMP, Simon J., HODGKINSON, Emily H., VANE, Christopher H., POULTON, Catherine, and FREEBOROUGH, Katy, British Geol Survey, Keyworth, NG12 5GG, United Kingdom, jbri@bgs.ac.uk
168-145:00 PM FORENSIC GEOLOGY AT THE FBI: WHY DOES THE FBI NEED A GEOLOGIST?: KOREJWO, David A., Laboratory Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Trace Evidence Unit, 2501 Investigation Parkway, Quantico, VA 22135, david.korejwo@ic.fbi.gov
168-155:15 PM COMPARISON OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND FORENSIC GEOLOGY: ROEMMEL, Janet S., 3205 Teton Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84109-2332, roemmel@xmission.com

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