'The Bones Don't Lie'. Jeff Guntzel.
by Guntzel, Jeff; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2005Article 58Human Relations. Publisher: National Catholic Reporter, 2004ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Bones | Computers -- Scientific use | Forensic anthropology | Forensic scientist | Human rights -- International aspects | Mass burials | Massacres | Snow, ClydeDDC classification: 050 Summary: "Clyde Snow is a forensic anthropologist. But it makes more sense to call him a detective. He digs up clues from the ground, from graves both proper and improvised. He makes witnesses of bones and he has dug up and sorted out witnesses from the mass graves of the most vicious and unthinkable massacres of the last half-century." (NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER) This article profiles forensic anthropologist Clyde Snow and the impact of his work in human rights cases, noting "often a direct line exists between the data in human rights reports from all corners of the globe and Snow's work in mass graves and laboratories."Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 56 Rejecting a Ritual of Pain. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 56 Genital Mutilation Is Traditional in Iraq's Kurdistan. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 57 Who V. Saddam?. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 58 'The Bones Don't Lie'. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 58 A 'Bone Woman' Chronicles the World's Massacres. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 58 Anthropologists Digging Up the Truth. | REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 59 Activists Say There's Still a Dirty War Going on in Mexico. |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2005.
Originally Published: 'The Bones Don't Lie', July 30, 2004; pp. 13-16.
"Clyde Snow is a forensic anthropologist. But it makes more sense to call him a detective. He digs up clues from the ground, from graves both proper and improvised. He makes witnesses of bones and he has dug up and sorted out witnesses from the mass graves of the most vicious and unthinkable massacres of the last half-century." (NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER) This article profiles forensic anthropologist Clyde Snow and the impact of his work in human rights cases, noting "often a direct line exists between the data in human rights reports from all corners of the globe and Snow's work in mass graves and laboratories."
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