2nd International Conference on Environmental and Criminal Soil Forensics
Date: 30 October – 1 November 2007
Venue: James Watt Conference Centre 1, Edinburgh Conference Centre, Heriot Watt University, Scotland
Programme: This is available as a 450KB pdf, (last updated 16th October).
The listing below was further updated on 17th October.
Monday 29 October
17.30-19.00
Registration Reception with wine/savouries. Music by The Castle String Quartet.
19.00
Evening free for delegates to choose own dinner arrangements
DAY 1
Tuesday 30 October
James Watt Conference Centre 1
08.30-09.00
Registration
09.00-09.10
Welcome and introduction to Conference
Dr Lorna Dawson and Professor David Miller of the Macaulay Land Use Research Institute.
09.10-09.25
Welcome to Edinburgh by Tom Nelson, Director of Forensics Services for the Scottish Police Services Authority, (SPSA)
Chair Professor Karl Ritz
Session organisers: Professor Karl Ritz, Professor David Miller and Dr Lorna Dawson
09.30-10.05
Keynote Speaker
Dr Stephen Mudge, The University of Wales, Bangor
“Soil and Sediment Environmental forensics – what do we know?”
10.05-10.45
Case Studies
10.05 - 10.25 Jurian Hoogewerff and the TRACE Consortium, University of East Anglia, “Spatial provenance modelling for food and other natural products”
10.25 - 10.45 Steve Hillier, Lorna Dawson, Jean Robertson, Evelyne Delbos, Jenny Shiels, Stuart Campbell, Bob Mayes and Jasmine Ross, The Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, “Provenancing archaeological objects using traces of soil”
10.45-11.05
Refreshments and posters. PRESS CONFERENCE.
11.05-12.05
11.05 - 11.25 Pat Pollard, The Robert Gordon University, “The potential use of a novel heavy metal sensor and novel taggants in environmental forensic investigations”
11.25 - 11.45 Bob Kalin, David Livingstone Centre for Sustainability, Strathclyde University "Molecular Chemistry and Isotopes: What are the limits of their Forensic Application?"
11.45 - 12.05 Isabel Fernandes, University of Porto,“The causes of deterioration of concrete from a forensic point of view”
12.05-13.45
LUNCH
Poster session
Chair Ms Marianne Stam
Session organisers: Professor David Miller, Dr Lorna Dawson and Professor Karl Ritz
13.45-14.25
Keynote Speaker
Professor Rob Fitzpatrick, Centre for Australian Forensic Soil Science
“Forensic soil science: current research and case work activities in Australia”
14.25-17.00
Case Studies
14.25 - 14.45 Mark Raven, CSIRO Land and Water, “Overview of X-ray diffraction techniques with application to criminal and environmental forensic cases”
14.45 - 15.05 Duncan Pirrie, Matthew R Power, Patricia EJ Wiltshire, Gavyn K Rollinson, Julia Newberry and Holly E Campbell, University of Exeter, "Critical evaluation of the application of automated SEM-EDS (QEMSCAN) mineral analysis in criminal and environmental soil forensics"
15.05 – 15.25 Brad Lee, Tanja Williamson, and Robert Graham, Purdue University, “Identification of stolen rare palm trees by soil morphological and mineralogical properties”
15.25-15.45
Refreshments and posters
15.45–17.25
15.45 - 16.05 Dave Barclay, The Robert Gordon University, “Meeting the user requirement-a case history”
16.05 - 16.25 Olga Gradusova and Ekaterina Michalovana, Russian Federal Center of Forensic Science, “Technogenetics minerals as indicators of the scene of a crime”
16.25 - 16.45 Andrew Moncrieff, Hawkins and Associates, “The Soham murder enquiry – the nature of evidence and its context”
16.45 - 17.05 Stuart Black, University of Reading, “Sourcing geological materials left at crime scenes: An isotope approach”
17.05 – 17.25 Ruth Morgan, Peter Bull, Jeanne Freudiger-Bonzon, Jayne Parmee, Sarah Dunkerley, Thomas Jellis and Katharine Nichols, UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science, “The geoforensic analysis of soils from footwear”
18.15 coach
19.00-20.30
Mercat Walking Tour, Edinburgh city.(Mercat Tours)
20.30
Delegates free to choose own dinner arrangements
DAY 2
Wednesday 31 October
James Watt Conference Centre 1
Chair Dr Laurance Donnelly and Dr Jamie Pringle
Session organisers: Dr Laurance Donnelly and Dr Alastair Ruffell
08.45 - 10.20
08.45 – 09.05 Ian Hanson, University of Bournemouth, “New observations on the interactions between evidence and the upper horizons of the soil”
09.05 - 09.25 Richard Munroe, Munroe Geological Services Ltd., “Forensic Geology”
09.25 - 09.45 Antoinette Keaney, Queen's University Belfast, “Rapid, non-destructive screening of adhered rock and crystalline material for criminal investigations”
09.45 – 10.20
Keynote Speaker
Ms Patricia Wiltshire, University of Aberdeen,
“The answer lies (but not always) in the soil”
10.20 - 10.40
Refreshments and posters
10.40 - 11.15
Keynote Speaker
Professor Mark Harrison MBE, National Police Improvement Agency
“The coordinated approach of multidisciplinary teams to locate concealed victims of homicide, developing the role of forensic landscape investigation”
Introduction by Dr Laurance Donnelly
11.15 - 12.35
11.15 – 11.35 Wayne Isphording, University of South Alabama, “The heavy metal component of soils: its use in civil and criminal investigations”
11.35 – 11.55 Ghasem Rahimi, J.S. Robinson and S. Nortcliff, University of Reading, “Assessment of aggregate sizes and phosphorus distribution in terms of landscape positions along Northing tramline”
11.55 - 12.15 Sabine Fiedler, Institute of Soil Science, University Hohenheim, “Localisation of a mass grave from the Nazi Era”
12.15 - 12.35 John Jervis, Keele University, “Towards an understanding of the geophysical response of shallow graves”
12.35 - 13.30
LUNCH and poster session
Geostatistics, Databases and Geographical Information Systems
Chair Ms Pat Bellamy
Session organisers: Ms Pat Bellamy and Dr Mark Brewer
13.30 - 14.05
Keynote Speaker
Dr Murray Lark, Rothamsted Research Institute
“Geostatistics and uncertainty in spatial variables in relation to forensic investigations”
14.05 - 14.40
Keynote Speaker
Professor Colin Aitken, University of Edinburgh
“Some thoughts on the role of statistics and probabilistic reasoning in the evaluation of evidence”
14.40 - 15.00
Refreshments and posters
15.00 - 16.20
15.00 - 15.20 Patricia Menchaca, Robert Graham and Marianne Stam, University of California, “Update on the development of a searchable forensic soil database (SQUID) in California, USA”
15.20 - 15.40 Heather Kerrigan and Jennifer McKinley, Queens University Belfast, “Case studies in high resolution spatial variability of materials in forensic investigations”
15.40 - 16.00 Andrew Morrisson, Sue McColl, Lorna Dawson, Sue Cocks, Lynne Macdonald and Bob Mayes. Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen/Liverpool John Moores University, “The soil forensic university network - SoilFUN: results from North West England”
16.00 – 16.20 George Sensabaugh, University of California – Berkeley, “Microbial community DNA profiling: sample similarity and geographic proximity in a large database”
16.20 - 16.30
Comfort Break
What, How, Where, Who? Chair: Professor Richard Aspinall
16.30 - 17.50
16.30 - 16.50 Bob Mayes, Lorna Dawson, Carol Smith, Andrew Morrisson, Jasmine Ross and Sarah Milton, The Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, “Using gas chromatographic information from plant wax compounds and similar substances for forensic matching of urban garden soils”
16.50 - 17.10 Stewart Walker, Flinders University, “A critical comparison of conventional, classic, spectroscopic and elemental analytical methods for forensic and environmental soil investigations”
17.10 - 17.30 Anna Williams and Tracey Temple, Cranfield University, “Forensic and environmental responses to pandemics through an applied taphonomic approach”
17.30 – 17.50 Wolfram Meier-Augenstein, Queen’s University Belfast, “Stable isotope composition of human tissue can aid victim identification”
19.00 Coach 19.30/20:00 - 00.00
Conference Dinner: “Murder, Mystery and Microscopes” Dinner and Ceilidh, Our Dynamic Earth, Edinburgh
DAY 3
Thursday 1 November
James Watt Conference Centre 1
Biological and Chemical Analytical Diagnostics
Chair: Dr Lorna Dawson
Session organisers: Dr Jacqui Horswell and Professor Mike McLaughlin
08.45 - 09.20
Keynote Speaker
Professor Ken Killham, University of Aberdeen, Remedios
“Toxicological fingerprinting of pollution incidents in soils and waters”
09.20 - 10.35
09.20 – 09.35 Leigh Burgoyne, James Waters, Graham Eariss and David Catcheside, Flinders University, “The advantages and limitations of DNA-typing soils and trace detritus from drug seizures using DNA arrays to assess the products from high-gain amplifications; an update”
09.35 - 09.50 Catriona Macdonald, Lynne Macdonald, Lorna Dawson and Jacqui Horswell, Institute of Environmental Science and Research, “Utilizing the soil organic component for forensic application”
09.50 - 10.05 Jean Robertson, Evelyne Delbos, Lorna Dawson, Kirsteen Angus and Andrew Morrisson, The Macaulay Institute, “In-situ FTIR analysis of soil evidence on clothing”
10.05 - 10.20 Alvin Smucker, Michigan State University, “Trace evidence extraction from soils and their concentration by hydropneumatic elutriation”
10.20 - 10.35 Brooke Anne Weinger, John Reffner and Peter De Forest, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, “Rapid, reliable and reviewable mineral identification with infrared microprobe analysis”
10.35 – 10.55
Refreshments and posters
Chair: Professor David Miller
Session organisers: Dr Mark Tibbett and Dr Shari Forbes
10.55 - 11.30
Keynote Speaker
Dr Mark Tibbett, University of Western Australia
“A contrived experimental approach to forensic taphonomy”
11.30 - 12.45
11.30 - 11.45 Kathryn L. Stokes, Natascha Heuer, Shari L. Forbes and Mark Tibbett,University of Western Australia, “Does soil type and its native microbiota have an effect on the decomposition of animal cadavers in a model system?”
11.45 - 12.00 Rachel Parkinson, Kerith-Rae Dias, Arpad Vass, Jacqui Horswell and Mark Tibbett, Institute of Environmental Science and Research Ltd., “Post-mortem interval estimation using microbial biomarkers”
12.00 - 12.15 David Carter, David Yellowlees and Mark Tibbet, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, “Using ninhydrin to presumptively test for gravesoil”
12.15 - 12.30 Shari L. Forbes, Laura Benninger and David Carter, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, “The biochemical alteration of soil by decomposition products”
12.30 – 12.45 Andrew Wilson and Rob Janaway, University of Bradford “Taphonomic changes to the buried body in arid environments: evidence from field experiments in southern Peru”
12.45 - 13.45
LUNCH and poster session
Chair: Professor Rob Fitzpatrick
Session organisers: Ms Joanne Ashworth and Dr Derek Auchie
13.45 - 14.20
Keynote Speaker
Ms Jo Ashworth, Head of Physical Evidence, National Police Improvement Agency
“A multi-disciplinary approach to soil forensics and crime investigation - the road to the courtroom”
14.20 - 15.20
14.20 - 14.40 Clive Alcock, Chief Executive Cumbria Police Authority, “March of the gladiators – scientists entering the arena of lawyers”
14.40 - 15.00 Derek Auchie, The Robert Gordon University, “Expert scientific evidence and the law: some important pitfalls”
15.00 - 15.20 Julie Bond and Stuart Bell, Forensic Science Service, “Mud sticks”
15.20 – 16.00
Refreshments and posters
Public Lecture: The Global Way Forward
Chair: TBC
16.00 - 16.45
Public Lecture
Dr James Robertson, Forensic Laboratories of the Australian Federal Police
"Digging for clues. How soil is helping to solve crimes."
16.45 - 17.00
Questions
17.00 – 17.15
Closing Remarks: Dr Lorna Dawson, Professor David Miller, Professor Karl Ritz