The Phnom Penh Post

Skin-crawling discovery: Scientists find corpses move

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AN AUSTRALIAN scientist has proved that human bodies move around significan­tly for more than a year after death, in findings that could have implicatio­ns for detectives and pathologis­ts around the world.

After studying and photograph­ing the movements of a corpse over 17 months, Alyson Wilson said on Friday that she found humans don’t exactly rest in peace.

In one case study, arms that began held close to the body ended up flung out to the side.

“We think the movements relate to the process of decomposit­ion, as the body mummifies and the ligaments dry out,” she said.

To carry out her unusual form of people watching, Wilson took the three-hour flight from Cairns to Sydney every month to check on the progress of a cadaver.

Her subject was one of seventy bodies stored at the Southern Hemisphere’s only “body farm”, which sits at a secret bushland location on the outskirts of Australia’s largest city.

Officially known as the Australian Facility for Taphonomic Experiment­al Research (After), the farm is carrying out pioneering research into postmortem movement.

Wilson and her colleagues were trying to improve a commonly used system for estimating the time of death using time-lapse cameras and in the process found that human bodies actually move around significan­tly.

Her findings were recently published in the journal Forensic Science Internatio­nal: Synergy.

A better understand­ing of these movements and the rate of decomposit­ion could be used by police to estimate time of death more accurately.

She hopes the knowledge could, for example, narrow down the number of missing persons that could be linked to an unidentifi­ed corpse.

A better understand­ing of post mortem movement could also help to reduce the incorrect cause of death or misinterpr­etation of a crime scene.

“They’ll map a crime scene, they’ll map the victim’s body position, they’ll map any physical evidence which is found, and they can understand the cause of death.”

The CQ University criminolog­y graduate says she started her unique project after a trip to Mexico to help classify Mayan-era skeletal remains.

“I was fascinated with death from a child and was always interested in how the body breaks down after death.”

“I guess that comes about from being raised on a farm and seeing livestock die and watching that process,” she said.

 ?? HANDOUT/CQ UNIVERSITY AUSTRALIA/AFP ?? Researcher Alyson Wilson works on ancient Mayan skeletal remains at an undisclose­d location in Mexico.
HANDOUT/CQ UNIVERSITY AUSTRALIA/AFP Researcher Alyson Wilson works on ancient Mayan skeletal remains at an undisclose­d location in Mexico.
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