If you phone the Forensic Anthropology Center at Texas State University (known as âFactsâ) when no one is available, the answerphone message begins: âIf you need immediate assistance with a donationâŠâ
Many university departments hope that people will give them money, but why, you might wonder, would anyone require âimmediate assistanceâ to do so?
ââŠPlease leave your name, the name of the decedent and your phone number.â
Assuming you are not thrown by the rather euphemistic use of the US legal term âdecedentâ, the penny should now have dropped. Although Facts is happy to receive financial contributions, the primary âdonationsâ that it is looking for are dead bodies.
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The website (which also sells Facts T-shirts) explains that such donations âhelp advance scientific knowledge in human decomposition, human skeletal variation, and osteological methods used by forensic anthropologistsâ. And this, in turn, can âassist law enforcement agents and the medicolegal community in their investigationsâ, notably by helping them to determine time since death or âdevelop a biological profile (for example, age, sex, ancestry and stature)â that can help to identify a corpse. A striking example of such expertise in action is a project called Operation ID, run by Kate Spradley, associate professor of anthropology at Texas State, which works with the remains of Latin American migrants who were trafficked to near the US-Mexican border and then left to fend for themselves in the appalling heat.
Facts is one of six such facilities in the US, colloquially known as âbody farmsâ (the first outside the US is currently being built by the University of Technology Sydney). The pioneer, the University of Tennessee Anthropological Research Facility, was set up outside Knoxville by anthropologist William Bass in 1981. It appears under a slightly different name in Patricia Cornwellâs 1994 thriller The Body Farm, in which the heroine, forensic scientist Kay Scarpetta, encounters âplastic-lined pits where bodies tethered to cinder blocks were submerged in water. Old rusting cars held foul surprises in their trunks or behind the wheel. A white Cadillac, for example, was being driven by a manâs bare bones. Of course, there were plenty of people on the ground, and they blended so well with their surroundings that I might have missed some of them were it not for a gold tooth glinting or mandibles gapingâŠWalnuts were all around, but I would not have eaten one of them because death saturated the soil and body fluid streaked the hills.â
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Although this passage no doubt includes an element of the thriller writerâs licence to shock, Cornwell certainly has first-hand knowledge of the facility. She contributed a foreword to Bass and Jon Jeffersonâs 2004 book Deathâs Acre: Inside the Legendary âBody Farmâ, which includes a description of an experiment that Bass conducted on Cornwellâs behalf into the marks left by a coin on a decaying corpse.
It is obvious that a better understanding of how bodies decay in particular circumstances, how (and how quickly) they get disfigured by scavengers and what skeletal remains reveal about someoneâs weight or lifestyle can provide important information for law enforcement. It is equally obvious that the sights and smells associated with the processes of skin slippage, âbloatingâ and âmarblingâ and the damage inflicted by maggots and vultures make for a challenging working environment. So how do staff and students cope? What do local communities make of such facilities? And even if people are keen to do good after their deaths, isnât it rather odd for them to choose to donate their bodies to the local body farm, rather than the local medical school? Enemies defeated in battle may be left to rot, but isnât there a universal human need to create rituals around the deaths of loved ones? Isnât it violating some deep taboo just to dump their bodies in a field, whatever good may come of it?
At parties, says Melissa Connor, director of the Forensic Investigation Research Station (Firs) at Colorado Mesa University, âpeople generally think [my job] is cool, partly because they donât understand the reality of dealing with deceased humans and their familiesâ. The popularity of television series featuring forensic scientists, such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and Bones, means that âpeople generally have an understanding of why we do thisâ; much of the stationâs work does indeed involve âtraining police for their needs if they wish to collect evidence and estimate post-mortem intervalâ.
Firs is the most recent of the six US facilities to be set up. The original plan to locate it closer to residential areas was rejected amid local concerns about âodour and fliesâ, but since Connor joined in 2012 the community has been very positive: âHow much more supportive can they be than giving us their bodies?â she asks. The facility has received about 30 corpses since it began operating in late 2013, even though its need to take possession of them before they start to decompose means that there is no time for families to hold a traditional memorial service (for which reason Connor suggests âa memorialisation without the bodyâ).

When it comes to students, Connor offers âa fairly organised desensitisation processâ.
âI donât take a freshman out to the body farm and let them see 20 human remains on their first day of college,â she explains. âThey take a couple of classes with me, and we are small enough [in number] that I can watch the students and see how they are reacting.â Yet in the case of students studying autopsy procedures, for example, many soon âmorph from standing outside the window and watching it from the corner of their eyes to going in and lending a handâ.
Connor cites a particular case of a female student who âdoesnât mind looking, but has a real problem with the smell. Weâre finding ways of working on that. We went out [to the body farm] on a nice breezy day and she was fine with that. But when we get relatively fresh and relatively odoriferous cadavers with no breeze, thatâs when she says: âI think Iâm going to go back inside.â Iâve suggested she can work with archaeologists, where she can put her knowledge of the skeleton to use.â
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She has little sympathy for the notion that there is something âunnaturalâ about the work. âPersonally, I think laying a body outside to decay could be considered a hell of a lot more natural than stuffing it full of chemicals and putting it in a box in the ground. Weâve had donors talking about simply allowing their bodies to decay naturallyâŠOthers just want to stay on the west slope of Colorado â they like it here.â
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Similar themes are taken up by Cheryl Johnston, director of the Forensic Osteology Research Station (Forest) at Western Carolina University, which currently has 10 bodies exposed on the surface and four buried. The latter provide âthe right kind of training materialâ (as opposed to the placenta or bags of chemical used elsewhere) for the institutionâs pioneering cadaver dog training courses, which teach the animals to find but not to disturb the corpses.
A further three corpses have been laid out in wood chips for what Johnston calls âresearch on human composting as an alternative mortuary treatmentâ. Forest is carrying this out for an organisation called the Urban Death Project, which hopes to develop more environmentally friendly forms of body disposal, using neither the chemicals required for embalming nor the fuel needed for cremation. Eventually, if Johnstonâs research goes well, the process may generate âcompost material which can be spread on a flower garden or in a park to help bring new life forthâ.
She agrees with Connor that the popularity of forensic anthropology among television producers means that the public generally understand Forestâs work and the good that comes of it. Nonetheless, she comes across âa lot of misunderstandingâ, so itâs good to have an opportunity to âset people straight. They just think [dealing with dead bodies] is way more gruesome and gory than it really is. Yes, it smells bad and looks kind of horrible for a while, but itâs not blood and guts or dismemberment. There are a lot of things far more graphic. Itâs basically just peace, tissue coming apart, dissolution of tissue.â
Facts director Daniel Wescott is told âall the timeâ that âIâm glad itâs your job and not mineâ. But, from his point of view, the smell â which he is âalwaysâ asked about â âis not nearly as bad as people think it is. Itâs only when [cadavers] are in bloat that they smell.â
He says the centre gets about 70 donated bodies a year: âIdeally we would like 100 a year, though itâs not as if we do any kind of advertisement or anything.â Apart from the âgreenâ considerations, other incentives to donate include the costs of traditional funerals and the fact that such facilities, unlike medical schools, may accept bodies on which an autopsy has been performed, or whose organs have been donated.
Facts has about 60 bodies at any one time. Eight or nine are left completely unprotected, since one of the centreâs specialisms is research on avian scavengers, which Wescott describes as âvery important for times of death, because the birds can skeletonise a body in less than a day â a lot quicker than people thought beforeâ. Other major projects are looking at how factors such as obesity are âreflected in the microstructure of the boneâ; whether drones can detect changes in soil chemistry that might indicate the presence of a corpse; and estimating time since death âespecially long term â months or years out, rather than just whether they are in rigor mortis or stuff like thatâ. The facility is also open to more specific enquiries from the police, such as whether diabetes has any effect on the speed of decomposition.
Like his fellow directors, Wescott is eloquent on the practical value of Factsâ research and doesnât see it as breaching any taboo or interfering with the mourning process.
âYou can hold a funerary ritual with the body unembalmed,â he points out. âI guess you could do anything you wanted to â youâd just have to do it relatively quick.â And, at a later stage, âthe families can come and visit the skeletons, which we process and retain so they can be utilised for hundreds of years and hundreds of studiesâ.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Bodies of evidence
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