1Associate Professor, Department of Forensic and State Medicine, Burdwan Medical College
2Senior Resident, Burdwan Medical College
3Senior Resident, Burdwan Medical College
4Associate Professor, Department of Forensic and State Medicine, Burdwan Medical College
5Senior Resident, Kalimpong District Hospital
6Junior Resident, Department of Forensic and State Medicine, Burdwan Medical College
*Corresponding Author, Aniruddha Das, Email: fmtdrani1982@gmail.com, fsmdrani1982@gmail.com, Mobile No.: +919831437298
Online Published on 15 February, 2023.
In a demographically diverse, vast and densely populated country like India, the establishment of identity of a deceased assumes great medico-legal importance. It also poses a true challenge to the forensic scientist working in an environment where decomposition and taphonomic process are rapid. Structurally bones resist common degradation and putrefactive changes and remain longer as material for evidential value. Human skeletal remains are found under suspicious circumstances and doctors examining them need to give an opinion in the court of law. One of the important data for identification is the stature. Henceforth, a technique is needed for reconstruction of total length of long bones from their fragments. The current investigation was designed to estimate the total length of humerus using its fragmentary length in a population specific study to employ them in stature formulae for population specific cases and finally to estimate the stature of the individual. After getting institutional ethical committee clearance, the study over 79 humeri revealed linear equation where total length of humerus was used as dependent variable and the different fragmentary length being the independent variables.
Reconstruction, Humerus fragments, Total humerus length, Forensic anthropometry