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One of the surprising things about the natural world is that
animals are dying around us all the time and yet we rarely see any
evidence of it. This is a testimony to the efficiency of the large
variety of organisms which decompose animal corpses. Whilst
bacteria and fungi are the main groups involved in decomposition
processes, the larger insects additionally provide an important
physical disruption of body tissues, which aids the penetration of
micro organisms and speeds the collapse of the body structure. A
human corpse is treated no differently and the same groups of
organisms are involved. From a forensic science viewpoint the
universality of the decay process provides two major advantages.
Information based on the decomposition of animals is of
considerable value when considering human cases and the
successional pattern of decay is broadly equivalent wherever the
process is being studied. Historically, the usefulness of insects
in solving crime can be traced back in the literature to the 13th
century. McKnight 1, 2] translated a Chinese text of this period
which contains an account of how a law officer dealt with a case of
murder in the rice fields. Death had been caused by a sickle and
the official ordered all the field workers to line up and lay their
sickles on the ground in front of them. Flies began to be attracted
to one of the sickles whereupon its owner confessed to the crime."
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