Winner of a 2015 Most Promising New Textbook Award from the Text and Academic Authors Association
1. Introduction2. Human Osteology and Odontology3. Skeletal Examination and Documentation Methods4. Medicolegal Significance5. Forensic Taphonomy6. Forensic Archaeology and Scene Processing Methods7. Processing and Preparing Remains8. Sex Estimation9. Ancestry Estimation10. Age Estimation11. Stature Estimation12. Individual Skeletal Variation13. Analysis of Skeletal Trauma14. Personal Identification15. Contemporary Issues in Forensic Anthropology
Dr. Christensen received her BA in Anthropology at the University
of Washington in Seattle, WA (1997), and her MA and PhD in
Anthropology at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, TN (2000
and 2003). Since 2004, she has worked for the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Laboratory in Quantico, Virginia. She was board
certified by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology in 2012
and is also an Adjunct Professor in the Forensic Science Program at
George Mason University.
Angi is a co-author of the award-winning textbook Forensic
Anthropology: Current Methods and Practice, as well as a co-founder
and Editor of the journal Forensic Anthropology. Her research
interests include methods of personal identification, trauma
analysis, elemental analysis, and skeletal imaging. She has
published articles in Journal of Forensic Sciences, American
Journal of Physical Anthropology, Journal of Forensic Radiology and
Imaging, Forensic Science International, Journal of Forensic
Identification, Forensic Anthropology, Forensic Science Medicine &
Pathology, and Journal of Anatomy. Dr. Passalacqua received his
Ph.D. in Anthropology from Michigan State University in 2012 and
was certified by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology in
2016. Dr. Passalacqua is an Assistant Professor and the Forensic
Anthropology Program Coordinator at Western Carolina University.
Prior to arriving at WCU, he worked as a deploying forensic
anthropologist with the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency –
Laboratory in Oahu, Hawaii.
Dr. Passalacqua is a co-founder and a current co-editor of the
journal Forensic Anthropology. He is also currently a board member
of the American Board of Forensic Anthropology, the chair of the
Anthropology Consensus Body of the Academy Standards Board, and a
member of the Anthropology sub-committee of the Organization of
Scientific Area Committees.
Dr. Passalacqua co-authored the award-winning textbook: Forensic
anthropology: Current methods and practice, as well as the books:
Ethics and professionalism in forensic anthropology, and A
laboratory manual for forensic anthropology. Dr. Passalacqua also
has numerous publications in such journals as: Forensic
Anthropology, The American Journal of Physical Anthropology, The
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, and The Journal of
Forensic Sciences, as well as chapters in such books as: Skeletal
trauma analysis: Case studies in context, The analysis of burned
human remains, Age estimation of the human skeleton, and A
companion to forensic anthropology. Eric J. Bartelink is a Full
Professor in the Department of Anthropology and co-Director of the
Human Identification Laboratory at California State University,
Chico. He received his BS in Anthropology at Central Michigan
University (1995), his MA in Anthropology at California State
University, Chico (2001), and his PhD in Anthropology at Texas
A&M University (2006). He became the 89th Diplomate of the
American Board of Forensic Anthropology in 2012. Eric’s interests
are in forensic anthropology and bioarchaeology, and he has
conducted research focused on skeletal trauma, taphonomy,
paleopathology, and stable isotope analysis. He has conducted an
extensive research program focused on central California
bioarchaeology, and also conducted work in American Samoa. In 2000,
he assisted with the excavation of mass graves in
Bosnia-Herzegovina through the United Nations International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, and also assisted in
the identification of victims from the World Trade Center 9/11
disaster in 2002 and 2003. He has published articles in Journal of
Forensic Sciences, American Journal of Physical Anthropology,
Journal of Archaeological Science, International Journal of
Osteoarchaeology, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory,
Archaeometry, and California Archaeology.
Eric teaches courses in introductory physical anthropology, human
osteology, forensic anthropology, bioarchaeology, forensic science,
and statistics. He is Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic
Sciences, and a member of the American Association of Physical
Anthropologists, Society of American Archaeology, Paleopathology
Association, and the Society for California Archaeology. He is a
current board member of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences
and a member of the Anthropology Sub-Committee of the Organization
of Scientific Area Committees.
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