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Science

Archaeologists Join Police To Help Fight Crime 23

An anonymous reader writes "Forensic experts and archaeologists have teamed up in the UK to unearth secrets of the past in the fight to trap today's criminals. Scientists will be teaming up with archaeologists to exchange skills, experience and techniques in what is to be a pioneering partnership."
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Archaeologists Join Police To Help Fight Crime

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  • Cool... (Score:3, Funny)

    by Sevn ( 12012 ) on Monday October 06, 2003 @08:03PM (#7148949) Homepage Journal
    A new breed of super crime fighting archeaologists with buggywhips and leather hats. Now all they need is a cool theme song.
  • not the same thing (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mOoZik ( 698544 ) on Monday October 06, 2003 @08:25PM (#7149100) Homepage
    The "police" and "forensic experts" are not the same thing. The police help to maintin order, to protect, to serve, etc. Forensic experts work mainly in the laboratory and in the crime scene. It was just a bit misleading reading that the police and scientists are going to work together.
    • The police help to maintin order, to protect, to serve, etc.

      HAH!.. it is clear from this statement that you know nothing whatsoever about police.. :)

      But really, despite their slogan, police are not leagaly obligated to protect or to serve anyone. In many places (like where I live) they are specifically discuraged from this sort of behavior. And dig this, they actually state the reason as: "our time is too valuable to deal with individuals, we need to be out catching criminals." Well, that's fine, but
  • The local medical examiner here in my local town is an archaeologist with some major papers and discoveries under his belt. Plus he teaches archaology at the local comunnity college. He has been doing all of this for the last 15 years.
  • Can anyone clue me in on how they get the finger prints from bodies that were buried from times as far back as the Roman Empire's rule?
  • And what are archaeologists? Laymen?
  • Big deal (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 06, 2003 @09:02PM (#7149345)
    archaeologists have been used for the biggest serial murder case [www.cbc.ca] in Canadian history already. Over 70 women are believed to have been killed, probably by the man who's been charged with 15 of the deaths.
  • Any outside technical people working with police are preferrable to the police' own experts: for being interested in geting their science right rather than getting their job done and over with -possibly by framing up the suspect.
  • Indiana Jones fought the Nazis, for crissakes. Compared to this, fighting common two-bit crooks is a cakewalk.
  • ...the archaeologists get PBA cards, yellow flashing lights for their vehicles, and all the jelly donuts they can eat!
  • doesn't this seem like a movie setup? something involveing releaseing a demon thats been sealed for 1000 years or something.
  • "Forensic experts and archaeologists have teamed up in the UK to unearth secrets of the past in the fight to trap today's criminals."

    Well the two degrees are pretty much the same. Forensic Experts are usually Forensic Anthropolgist...and Archeology is a Anthropological Degree also.

    I don't see why this is so groundbreaking, Forensic Anthropologist have been teaming up with Archaeologist for years...Thats one of the jobs they can do if they decide not to work for law enforcement.

    Or maybe I'm just missing
    • Many of the shows I see on the History Channel recently are instead about how forensic criminologists are helping archaeologists unearth the secrets of the past.

      I think it's like announcing a "groundbreaking new partnership between masons and carpenters to build a cathedral of both stone AND wood." Yeah, they have some different techniques, but come on. It's obvious that a mason who becomes a carpenter will be more prepared than, say, a circus clown. It's obvious that his masonry training may help him inn

  • .

    Here is a university short course [www.mun.ca] offered by an archaeology dept on forensic investigation.

    The School of Conservation Sciences at Bournemouth University offers highly successful postgraduate courses in Forensic Archaeology and Forensic and Biological Anthropology, as well as an undergraduate programme in Archaeology. The Forensic Archaeology course provides valuable expertise in the search, location and recovery of buried victims and materials, and shows how archaeological principles and methods may be

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