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Murder most florid : inside the mind of a forensic botanist / Dr. Mark A. Spencer.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Quadrille Publishing, 2019Copyright date: copyright 2019Description: 165 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781787134003 (hardback)
  • 1787134008 (hardback)
Other title:
  • Inside the mind of a forensic botanist
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
The phone call -- Botany, forensics and me -- The deposition scene -- Becoming a forensic scientist -- Brambles and Buddleja -- Tales of knives and wood -- The layby -- Grave searchers, canines and cadaverine -- Pollen and spores -- Looking anew -- Fragments -- The curious microscopic world -- The case of the scabby ankle -- The future of environmental forensics.
Summary: Dr Mark Spencer is a forensic botanist - in other words, he helps police with cases where plants can unlock clues to solve crimes, from murder and rape to arson and burglary. Murder Most Florid is an enthralling, first-person account that follows Mark's unconventional and unique career, one that takes him to woodlands, wasteland and roadsides, as well as police labs, to examine the botanical evidence of serious crimes. From unearthing a decomposing victims from brambles to dissecting the vegetation of a shallow grave, Mark's botanical knowledge can be crucial to securing a conviction. More widely, this gripping book challenges our attitude to death and response to crime. It picks holes in the sensationalized depictions of policing we see on TV, and asks pertinent questions about public sector funding in the face of rising crime. Most importantly, it shows us how the ancient lessons of botanical science can still be front and centre in our modern, DNA-obsessed world.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Lending Books Elisabeth C. Miller Library Tall Shelves QK50 .S74 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39352800179301
Total holds: 0

The phone call -- Botany, forensics and me -- The deposition scene -- Becoming a forensic scientist -- Brambles and Buddleja -- Tales of knives and wood -- The layby -- Grave searchers, canines and cadaverine -- Pollen and spores -- Looking anew -- Fragments -- The curious microscopic world -- The case of the scabby ankle -- The future of environmental forensics.

Dr Mark Spencer is a forensic botanist - in other words, he helps police with cases where plants can unlock clues to solve crimes, from murder and rape to arson and burglary. Murder Most Florid is an enthralling, first-person account that follows Mark's unconventional and unique career, one that takes him to woodlands, wasteland and roadsides, as well as police labs, to examine the botanical evidence of serious crimes. From unearthing a decomposing victims from brambles to dissecting the vegetation of a shallow grave, Mark's botanical knowledge can be crucial to securing a conviction. More widely, this gripping book challenges our attitude to death and response to crime. It picks holes in the sensationalized depictions of policing we see on TV, and asks pertinent questions about public sector funding in the face of rising crime. Most importantly, it shows us how the ancient lessons of botanical science can still be front and centre in our modern, DNA-obsessed world.

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