Lauren Pharr: How vultures can help solve crimes
Lauren Pharr promotes the role of vultures in forensic science. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to be a doctor.
how vultures eat dead things
my parents had in mind.
and how vultures affect crime scenes.
about how we take vultures for granted
I want to tell you a story.
all 1,000 of us.
in Nashville, Tennessee,
floppy derby hats.
to start talking
and see vultures circling round and round.
connection to death,
about these birds at crime scenes?
are connected to death.
I received from a detective in Louisiana:
do we have in Louisiana?"
question I get all the time.
in the sky within the US are vultures.
that live in Louisiana
of vultures in forensic science,
certain things become apparent.
the individual is dead.
to try to find the body.
that vultures circling in the sky
seen a vulture up close
to flap their wings and fly,
which are vortexes or little tornadoes
as the sun heats up the ground.
a circling vulture,
from point A to B,
to try to find a body,
or on a fence post.
the only animals in the world
that you see here is super cool,
that can actually smell.
by sensing a chemical
produced following death.
and quickly scavenges.
and leave you with a skeleton.
of vultures is not in the air,
giving you another call.
vultures are key forensic players,
are so good at what they do.
and if they scavenge humans,
forensic textbooks and training manuals?
to exclude animal scavengers
over the decaying subject matter.
would run away with their subject matter
any data to report --
in a lengthy skeletonization process,
what detectives use during investigations.
when people see a skeletonized body,
for a really long time undiscovered."
could have been there
if scavenged by vultures.
for vulture scavenging
inaccurately estimating
missing person's files.
scientists to focus on vulture evidence
to consider vulture scavenging
when skeletal remains are found.
of the kidnapping case.
like areas with water.
the first five days following death,
an intact spinal column and feathers.
in a shallow grave.
40 yards from where the body was found.
to a bloody pine cone.
and they typically don't wander.
but they're not going to wander 40 yards.
when it will get its next meal.
if vultures were at the scene.
was consistent with the turkey vulture.
would a vulture wander 40 yards?
to operate in a manner
by biology and physics.
the numerous bating experiments
where you can donate your body to science.
my experiences with trapping
of monitoring vultures
and had an "Aha!" moment.
lure a vulture 40 yards from a body.
to the detectives
the victim had been incapacitated
was thought to have occurred
and buried in a shallow grave.
was the lure for the vulture
studying vulture behavior
some of the evidence.
out of the grave.
you have to think about the whole picture.
indicated that vultures were at the scene.
scavenging behavior.
of the turkey vulture.
has a cut-like tear near the wrist.
smells the decay, lands.
the soft tissues away from the bone.
tear and pull, tear and pull.
the scavenging efficiency of vultures.
support the time line
together for the murder.
the vultures at the crime scene.
these very subtle clues.
and fast at what they do.
the vulture evidence to the detective.
the vulture evidence in court.
was a death penalty case.
how studying vulture behavior
investigation possible.
in forensic studies,
of what happened, when it happened
at a crime scene with a dead body --
to find the clues vultures have left.
brings up vultures on a date,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lauren Pharr - Forensic anthropologistLauren Pharr promotes the role of vultures in forensic science.
Why you should listen
Every animal has its enthusiast. For the turkey vulture, it's Dr. Lauren Pharr. Originally from Tennessee, Pharr uses her PhD from LSU's Department of Geography and Anthropology to research and promote the role of vultures in forensic science.
Through cross-disciplinary research in forensic anthropology and geographic information systems, Pharr has shown that deeper study of vulture scavenging can lead to faster and more accurate work in identifying human remains. Pharr's work has led her across the country to help law enforcement professionals and researchers at the Texas State Forensic Anthropology Research Facility, the Smithsonian Ornithology Laboratory and the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Whether it's helping local law enforcement solve missing-person cases or assisting in data collection and research at national labs, Pharr proves that this often misunderstood species offers more than a cliché about vultures circling.
Lauren Pharr | Speaker | TED.com