The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

North-east experts help police in 1957 missing girl quest

Search: Inquiry into Moira’s disappeara­nce goes on

- BY JOANNE WARNOCK

Experts from the north and north-east are helping police in their bid to find answers to the disappeara­nce of schoolgirl Moira Anderson in North Lanarkshir­e more than 60 years ago.

Professor Lorna Dawson, a forensic soil scientist based at the James Hutton Institute, has joined a team of Police Scotland detectives as they commence a full scientific examinatio­n of several sites in Coatbridge as part of the investigat­ion into the 1957 disappeara­nce of the 11-yearold.

World-renowned Professor Sue Black, director of anatomy and human identifica­tion at Dundee University and from Inverness, is also heavily involved with the operation.

The investigat­ion is focused on a site at the Monkland Canal in Carnbroe, between Airdrie and Coatbridge, after new evidence came to light.

The search included the use of enhanced technology including Ground Penetratin­g Radar (GPR) and Sonar Scanning to identify any anomalies at the base of the canal.

Magnetomet­ry (identifica­tion of magnetic anomalies) and earth science techniques have been applied to determine if there is any evidence of Moira’s remains at the bottom of the canal.

Prof Dawson was on board the boat that carried out the non-disruptive search methods and said: “We found anomalies in the silt which will be recovered by the dive team next week and identified as to what has caused these.

“We created reference informatio­n by planting a bag of pig bones of a similar size and shape of what Moira’s body would have been.

“The divers are now re- covering the silt at the location we identified the anomalies and are sifting through it – anthropolo­gists are on hand to look at any bones that may be found and identify what they are from and sift out any that may be of interest to this inquiry.

“My part was working with police Scotland in terms of combining the landscape soil and education features – coupled with witness evidence that came forward and mapping that on a geographic­al informatio­n system. Then we have narrowed down five areas in the canal which are consistent to someone who was seen sitting that matches the descriptio­n of Alexander Gartshore.”

Divers will search for items of clothing and any items such as coins that may have been in Moira’s pockets when she went missing.

Moira disappeare­d after leaving her grandmothe­r’s house in Coatbridge on February 23, 1957 to buy margarine at a local shop and never returned.

Bus driver and convicted paedophile Alexander Gartshore, who died in 2006, is suspected of murdering Moira and disposing of her body.

 ??  ?? NO ANSWERS: Moira Anderson disappeare­d more than 60 years ago aged 11
NO ANSWERS: Moira Anderson disappeare­d more than 60 years ago aged 11
 ??  ?? Police divers during a search of the Monkland Canal
Police divers during a search of the Monkland Canal

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