miércoles, 9 de noviembre de 2011

Siete mitos a cerca de los incendios

Imagen tomada de Forensic Magazine
Algunas de las consideradas "reglas de oro" en el estudio de incendios, que podían ser signos de la presencia de algún acelerante para iniciarlo o provocarlo, según los expertos no son signos inequívocos.  Discover Magazine publica lo que denomina Siete mitos a cerca de los incendios:  
Seven Myths About Arson

10.24.2011
Fire investigators have long used certain rules of thumb to identify arson. Many have been proved incorrect.
by Douglas Starr
1. Crazing of windows, in which hundreds of cracks appear in the glass, indicates rapid heating and means an accelerant was used to start the fire. REALITY: Crazing is caused by the rapid cooling of window glass, as when water from a fire hose strikes a hot window.
2. Burn marks on the floor indicate that a fire was purposely set, because heat rises and fire only burns upward. It must have been set by pouring a liquid on the ground and lighting it. REALITY: When a fire reaches flashover—the point at which an entire room ignites—extreme radiant heat will produce burn marks or even burn holes in the floor.
3. Melted metals, such as doorway thresholds, indicate that a liquid fire starter must have been used in order to reach temperatures that exceed their melting points. REALITY: Wood fires, especially those that reach flashover, frequently exceed the melting point of metals.
4. Burn marks under doorway thresholds or under furniture indicate that a liquid accelerant must have been used to start the fire, since the liquid must have been poured and then seeped. REALITY: Post-flashover fires commonly cause burning under thresholds and furniture.
5. Spalling, or surface chipping of concrete, indicates that a liquid accelerant must have been poured on the concrete surface and lit. REALITY: Many factors can cause this effect, including differential expansion between the heated surface and the interior. Accelerant poured on the concrete actually protects it by providing a cool, evaporative surface.
6. Alligatoring, the appearance of blisters on the surface of burned wood, points to a fire’s origin. Small, flat blisters result from a slow burn; large, shiny blisters indicate rapid heating and hence the use of an accelerant. REALITY: There is no scientific evidence for any such correlation. Both types of blisters can appear on the same burned wall.
7. Sharply angled V-pattern burn marks on a wall denote a fast-burning fire that must have been started with a liquid accelerant. REALITY: Patterns can result from a number of factors, including ventilation, air currents, location of fuel, and the materials burning objects are made of.

La información puede ser consultada en el siguiente vínculo de Discover Magazine

Imagen tomada del artículo original de Discover Magazine
http://discovermagazine.com/2011/nov/24-seven-myths-about-arson 






 ¿Consecuencia o coincidencia?

 La Comisión de Ciencias Forenses de Texas recomendó que se revisen todos los casos de condenas relacionadas con incendios y emitió 17 recomendaciones, entre ellas que se de capacitación avanzada a los expertos y que se apeguen a estándares nacionales.

La referencia se encuentra en Huffintong Post


lunes, 7 de noviembre de 2011

Disponible gratis el libro The Fingerprint Sourcebook


Si bien las crestas en la piel de los pulpejos de los dedos fueron observadas durante muchos años antes, no es sino hasta antes de 1788 que la singularidad delas mismas fue reconocida reconocida en Europa.

La primera afirmación escrita que se tiene de la unicidad de las huellas dactilares fue escrita por el médico y anatomista alemán J. C. A. Mayer, quien escribió en su libro Anatomical Copper-plates with Appropriate Explanations: “Although the arrangement of skin ridges is never duplicated in two persons, nevertheless the similarities are closer among some individuals. In others the differences are marked, yet in spite of their peculiarities of arrangement all have a certain likeness”

La cita anterior forma parte del primer capítulo del libro The Fingerprint Sourcebook preparado por International Asociation for Identification y el Scientific Working Group on Friction Ridge Analysis, Study and Technology y publicado por el National Institute for Justice.

EL libro pretende ser una referencia definitiva en la ciencia de Dactiloscopía (fingerprint identification) y cubre temas que van desde la historia hasta los factores de percepción, cognitivos y psicológicos de los expertos, pasando por, anatomía, técnicas de toma de huellas, características, AFIS, entre otros.

He hecho una revisión rápida y me parece muy recomendable, espero pronto leerlo completo y comentar al respecto.

Desde el siguiente vínculo se puede bajar el libro completo:


O bien consultarlo por capítulos desde la página web de NIJ:

martes, 1 de noviembre de 2011

Detección de drogas y explosivos

Detección de drogas y explosivos usando Microextracción planar en fase sólida y espectrometría de movilidad de iones.

Está disponible la información de un taller relacionado con el tema, auspiciado por el Instituto
Nacional de Justicia de Estados Unidos





At the completion of the Field Detection of Drugs and Explosive Odor Signatures Using Planar Solid Phase Microextraction Ion Mobility Spectrometry Technology Transition Workshop, the participant will have acquired the knowledge to:
  • Understand the theory of and practice for vapor sampling of explosives and drugs
  • Utilize the PSPME devices to sample the air in an area suspected of containing contraband in both the static and dynamic (vacuum sampling) modes and by swabbing surfaces
  • Couple the PSPME to explosive trace detectors (ETDs) on Ion Mobility Spectrometry (IMS) and Differential Mobility Spectrometry (DMS) instruments to collect data from PSPME-IMS systems
  • Evaluate the use of PSPME-IMS and PSPME-DMS for drug and explosives detection in various scenarios (headspace sampling of closed spaces such as inside a vehicle, headspace sampling of open air systems and particle sampling)
  • Understand the maintenance and proper use of the PSPME devices