Programme/Approved Electives for 2025/26
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
In this module you will build on your existing knowledge of forensic anthropology and taphonomy, practicing more specialist techniques and developing your critical analysis skills. You will spend time working out in the field, practicing the methods used to locate and recover skeletal remains, as well as in the laboratory where you will gain experience in microscopy, virtual anthropology, photography and soil sampling. The module will encourage you to apply environmental evidence, such as botany, diatoms, and entomology to casework, and you gain confidence in differentiating between human and animal bone.
Aims
This module will focus on the examination of the human skeleton in a forensic context. Students enrolled on this module will build on the basic themes of forensic anthropology and taphonomy gained at the undergraduate level. They will study advanced osteology, making use of microscopy and analytical methods during the analysis of skeletal remains, as well as more specialist subjects related to victim search and recovery, forensic botany and entomology, commingling analysis and virtual anthropology. Students will gain hands-on fieldwork experience in the form of grave excavation (singular and mass graves), insect sampling, and body recovery. The module also encourages students to be critical of the current methods currently used by anthropologists, both in the laboratory and out in the field, and to develop an appreciation for the ethics associated with this subject.
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/fsc-40049/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
identify, side and name individual bones and teeth in the human skeleton (intact and fragmented) and the landmarks upon them: 1differentiate between human and animal remains using macro and microscopic methods: 1critically assess the methods commonly used in forensic anthropology with an appreciation for ethics in the field: 1compare the efficacy of traditional methods and virtual analyses of skeletal remains: 1diagnose and interpret antemortem conditions and trauma: 1make use of associated environmental evidence when processing and interpreting death scenes: 1recover and identify insect evidence from a death scene, applying it to casework for time of death estimates: 1critically assess and successfully implement appropriate search and recovery methods for buried human remains: 1
Active Learning Hours (total 60 hours):Lectures - 22 hoursPractical classes - 30 hoursTutorials -3 hourCollaborative activity online - 5 hoursIndependent study - 90 hours
Successful completion of a forensic anthropology module at undergraduate level
Description of Module Assessment
1: Report weighted 100%Case Study ReportStudents will work on a case study involving the recovery and analysis of skeletal remains. Over
the duration of several days, students will locate and excavate a grave using archaeological
methods, recovering a set of skeletal remains and any associated evidence at the scene. They
will then conduct a full analysis in the laboratory, submitting a final report of their findings that
will cover the fieldwork as well as the lab analysis. The word limit for the report will be 5000
words.