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Forensic microbiology / edited by David O. Carter, Jeffery K. Tomberlin, M. Eric Benbow, Jessica L. Metcalf.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Series: Forensic science in focusPublication details: Chichester, West Sussex, UK : John Wiley & Sons Ltd,, c2017.Description: xxiv, 391 pages : illustrations (some color); cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781119062554
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • QR41.2  F76 2017
Online resources:
Contents:
A primer on microbiology -- History, current, and future use of microorganisms as physical evidence -- Approaches and considerations for forensic microbiology decomposition research -- Sampling methods and data generation -- An introduction to metagenomic data generation, analysis, visualization, and interpretation -- Culture and long-term storage of microorganisms for forensic science -- Clinical microbiology and virology in the context of the autopsy -- Postmortem bacterial translocation -- Microbial impacts in postmortem toxicology -- Microbial communities associated with decomposing corpses -- Arthropod-microbe interactions on vertebrate remains: potential applications in the forensic sciences -- Microbes, anthropology, and bones -- Forensic microbiology in built environments -- Soil bacteria as trace evidence -- DNA profiling of bacteria from human hair: potential and pitfalls -- Perspectives on the future of forensic microbiology
Summary: Forensic Microbiology focuses on newly emerging areas of microbiology relevant to medicolegal and criminal investigations: postmortem changes, establishing cause of death, estimating postmortem interval, and trace evidence analysis. Recent developments in sequencing technology allow researchers, and potentially practitioners, to examine microbial communities at unprecedented resolution and in multidisciplinary contexts. This detailed study of microbes facilitates the development of new forensic tools that use the structure and function of microbial communities as physical evidence. Chapters cover: Experiment design - Data analysis -Sample preservation -The influence of microbes on results from autopsy, toxicology, and histology – Decomposition ecology -Trace evidence This diverse, rapidly evolving field of study has the potential to provide high quality microbial evidence which can be replicated across laboratories, providing spatial and temporal evidence which could be crucial in a broad range of investigative contexts. This book is intended as a resource for students, microbiologists, investigators, pathologists, and other forensic science professionals.
List(s) this item appears in: Print Books 2022
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Materials specified URL Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books Ladislao N. Diwa Memorial Library Reserve Section Non-fiction RUS QR41.2 F76 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Room use only 77811 00077760

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A primer on microbiology -- History, current, and future use of microorganisms as physical evidence -- Approaches and considerations for forensic microbiology decomposition research -- Sampling methods and data generation -- An introduction to metagenomic data generation, analysis, visualization, and interpretation -- Culture and long-term storage of microorganisms for forensic science -- Clinical microbiology and virology in the context of the autopsy -- Postmortem bacterial translocation -- Microbial impacts in postmortem toxicology -- Microbial communities associated with decomposing corpses -- Arthropod-microbe interactions on vertebrate remains: potential applications in the forensic sciences -- Microbes, anthropology, and bones -- Forensic microbiology in built environments -- Soil bacteria as trace evidence -- DNA profiling of bacteria from human hair: potential and pitfalls -- Perspectives on the future of forensic microbiology

Forensic Microbiology focuses on newly emerging areas of microbiology relevant to medicolegal and criminal investigations: postmortem changes, establishing cause of death, estimating postmortem interval, and trace evidence analysis. Recent developments in sequencing technology allow researchers, and potentially practitioners, to examine microbial communities at unprecedented resolution and in multidisciplinary contexts. This detailed study of microbes facilitates the development of new forensic tools that use the structure and function of microbial communities as physical evidence. Chapters cover: Experiment design - Data analysis -Sample preservation -The influence of microbes on results from autopsy, toxicology, and histology –
Decomposition ecology -Trace evidence This diverse, rapidly evolving field of study has the potential to provide high quality microbial evidence which can be replicated across laboratories, providing spatial and temporal evidence which could be crucial in a broad range of investigative contexts. This book is intended as a resource for students, microbiologists, investigators, pathologists, and other forensic science professionals.

Fund 164 Linar Educational Materials, Inc. Purchased 11-26-2019 77811 NEJ PHP 7968.00 2017-11-900 2017-1-0739

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