Forensic Geology: Tracking Victims through Makeup
Boulder, Colo., USA: A woman is abducted, caught in a human trafficking
ring, or worse. To find and save her quickly, investigators and police need
every forensic tool available.
Surprisingly, geology holds the key to one form of evidence: makeup. At
Miami University of Ohio, students Jessica Patrick and Jordan Vest are
unlocking this potentially overlooked but telltale clue. Their super-tool:
a spectroradiometer. “Maybe the eye can’t see it, but spectroscopy can,”
says Patrick.
Awarded an in-college grant for women’s issue studies, Patrick, Vest, and
other students are creating a library of the spectroscopic signatures and
other mineralogical characteristics of different types of makeup.
Ultimately, the library will be available for police, the National
Institute of Justice, women’s justice organizations, and others.
The key is to create a large enough library. Over the past two years, the
team has been collecting and analyzing different types of makeup on
different substrates. Substrates might include various types of fabric,
tile, bricks, and other materials on which makeup could remain behind at a
crime scene.
Patrick will present the project in an online poster session on Tuesday
from 11:30 to 11:40 am EDT, during the Geological Society of America’s
annual meeting.
“Makeup is basically a mineralogical product,” points out Associate
Professor Mark Krekeler, who oversees this and other forensic mineralogy
projects with collaborator Claire McLeod at Miami University. Vest and
Patrick say that for now their growing database is focused on powder-based
makeup such as blush and foundation, which contain geologic materials
including talc, montmorillonite, and kaolinite. Using the
spectroradiometer, they’ve been able to detect smears containing just 0.03
grams per square centimeter of makeup. The data base will also address
diversity, providing spectroscopic signatures of makeup products on
different skin tones.
Makeup can help link suspects, victims, and crimes several ways. “For
example,” says Vest, “if a suspect denies contact with the victim, this can
be used to match makeup products (found at a crime scene) with products
known to be used by the victim, perhaps found in her home.”
“Geology has broad implications and connections to everyday life. It’s
important in national security,” says Krekeler. He says the team hopes to
release a good initial library for public use by March 2021.
Hand-held technology is available now, and affordable drone-based
hyperspectral imager should be available in a few years, enabling use
directly at a crime scene investigation.
Patrick and Vest are both senior undergraduates, but see the project
continuing under the guidance of Krekeler. “One of the best things is that
we’ll be able to hand off the project to someone once we graduate,” says
Patrick. Together with colleagues, they are demonstrating how the science
of geology might help save women’s lives.
Contact: Dr. Mark Krekeler
Miami University of Ohio
Department of Geology and Environmental Earth Science
228 SHD/542 Mosler (Hamilton Campus)
513-785-3106
https://miamioh.edu/cas/academics/departments/geology/about/faculty-staff/krekeler/index.html
krekelmp@miamioh.edu
FEATURED ABSTRACT
44-7:
Forensic Mineralogy: Utilizing the Mineralogical, Textural, and
Spectral Properties of Makeup in Criminal Investigations
11:30 to 11:40 a.m. EDT
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2020AM/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/356705
The Geological Society of America, founded in 1888, is a scientific society
with over 20,000 members from academia, government, and industry in more
than 100 countries. Through its meetings, publications, and programs, GSA
enhances the professional growth of its members and promotes the
geosciences in the service of humankind. Headquartered in Boulder,
Colorado, GSA encourages cooperative research among earth, life, planetary,
and social scientists, fosters public dialogue on geoscience issues, and
supports all levels of earth-science education.
https://www.geosociety.org
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