Crime Scene Creatures: Interview: Forensic Entomologist Lee Goff
Find out what it takes to be a forensic entomologist. There are bugs and corpses involved.

Find out what it takes to be a forensic entomologist. There are bugs and corpses involved.
A body has been discovered. Collect and analyze the evidence, then determine the postmortem interval (PMI).
This forensic entomologist uses the life cycle of flies to bring killers to justice.
(Airs Sunday, August 2) NATURE explores the fascinating world of wildlife-related forensics in Crime Scene Creatures.
When a skeleton is found in the woods, a forensic botanist is called in to crack the case.
After a woman drowns mysteriously, diatoms found on recovered clothing help convict her husband.
Through the science of forensic entomology, the study of insects associated with a corpse, we learn that cadaverous critters can tell us a great deal about a crime.
Online and print resources for CRIME SCENE CREATURES.
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