, Beverly Connor [Diane Fallon Forensic Investigation 07] Dust To Dust (pdf) 

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day. Diane was about to go home when Andie forwarded a
phone call to her.
 Hello, this is Archaeo-Labs, said a voice.  We ve been
trying to get in touch with Dr. Marcella Payden without
success. Your number is a backup number she has in her
file.
DUST TO DUST 107
 Yes, Dr. Payden works here. I m Diane Fallon, director
of the RiverTrail Museum. How can I help you?
 She uses our labs to identify species-specific protein an-
tigens in bone-tempered pottery sherds.
 Yes, said Diane.  I m familiar with her work on Texas
pottery.
 Well, she sent us some pieces from Georgia. Actually,
she said it wasn t archaeological, but relatively modern.
And as in the archaeological samples, she wanted to know
the species of animal used in the pottery. To tell you the
truth, we don t quite know how to proceed.
 How do you mean? asked Diane.  You don t do analy-
sis of modern samples? I m not sure I understand.
 No, it s not that. We did the identification, but . . . well . . .
the protein antigen is human.
Diane was dumbstruck for a moment. The caller must have
thought she would be, because he waited patiently on the
other end.
 Human? said Diane.  Did she give you any informa-
tion about where in Georgia they came from? But Diane
knew. Marcella dug them up in her yard.
 No, he said.  She just labeled them Georgia.
 I m sorry, I didn t get your name. said Diane.
 Oh, I m Justin Ambrogi. I m the technician who runs the
samples in the lab. He cleared his throat.  What I m won-
dering is, that is, some of my coworkers think the sherds, be-
cause of the human bone in them, constitute a body legally,
that is and must be reported. I suppose it could be old
bones that were used, but don t the laws about the use of
humans and their body parts apply to ancient ones too?
 Yes, they do, said Diane.  You couldn t have known,
but in addition to being director of the museum, I m also
director of the crime lab here in Rosewood, Georgia, and
those items will fall under our jurisdiction, at least until we
sort out exactly where they came from.
 Well, this is convenient, then. I called the right place,
Justin said.
 Yes, you did. I ll also give you the name of a Rosewood
police detective you can send a copy of the test results to.
That way, your lab can be assured you followed proper pro-
tocol, said Diane.
 Yes. Thank you. To tell you the truth, we ran the tests
several times. The first time we thought it had to be an
error.
DUST TO DUST 109
 I can see why it would give you pause, said Diane. She
fished in her purse and pulled out Detective Hanks card
and read off his name and address.
Diane gave Justin her fax number so he could send her
the report directly. She thanked him and put the phone
back in its cradle.
 Okay, she whispered,  that was odd.
She picked up the phone and called Detective Hanks.
 I got an interesting call from a lab in Arizona, she
said.
 Oh? What about? he asked.
She first explained to him about Marcella s expertise in
North American aboriginal pottery. Then she explained
about the bone-tempered pottery of the late-prehistoric
sites in Texas that Marcella had studied. She explained that
Marcella had used a lab in Arizona to analyze protein an-
tigens in the pottery samples to find out what species of
animal contributed their bone to the pottery. She debated
whether to explain why archaeologists wanted that data,
but decided that would be too much information.
 She sent them some pottery sherds she found in Geor-
gia. I m assuming at her place, but the lab didn t know spe-
cifically where the sherds were found. When they ran their
test, it came up with human antigens, she said.
Just as she had, Hanks remained quiet for a long mo-
ment. She assumed he was trying to figure how the heck to
process that bit of information.
 She sent them pieces of broken pots that had human
bone crushed up in them? Who would do that? he asked.
 Pottery made in the late-prehistoric period had a tem-
pering substance added to the clay to keep air bubbles out
and keep it from breaking while it was being fired. The ad-
ditive was usually grit, fiber, shells stuff like that. Some
peoples in Texas used animal bone. Marcella apparently
found some pottery sherds in her yard and recognized
from their appearance that they were bone tempered. Her [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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