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Dive into the research topics where Martin J. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin J. Smith.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2015

An investigation of red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and Eurasian badger (Meles meles) scavenging, scattering, and removal of deer remains: forensic implications and applications.

Alexandria Young; Nicholas Márquez-Grant; Richard A. Stillman; Martin J. Smith; Amanda H. Korstjens

Within northwest Europe, especially the United Kingdom, the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and the Eurasian Badger (Meles meles) are the largest wild scavengers capable of modifying a set of remains through scavenging. Knowledge of region‐specific and species‐typical scavenging behaviors of scavengers within the crime scene area and surroundings can aid in more efficient and accurate interpretations. The scavenging behaviors of captive and wild foxes and badgers were recorded and compared through actualistic methods and direct observation. The scavenging by wild foxes and badgers of surface‐deposited baits and whole deer (Cervus nippon; Capreolus capreolus) in a woodland was observed and analyzed. Wild foxes were found to scavenge deer more frequently than badgers. The scavenging of deer remains by foxes was also compared with forensic cases. The scavenging pattern and recovery distances of deer and human remains scavenged by foxes were similar but were potentially affected by the condition and deposition of a body, and the presence of clothing.


Antiquity | 2006

Bones chewed by canids as evidence for human excarnation. A British case study

Martin J. Smith

Excarnation – the exposure of a corpse for stripping and possible dispersal by birds and animals – is a burial rite known from ethnographic analogy. Detecting its occurrence in the past is another matter. Here the author proposes the marking of bones by dogs and other canids as evidence of excarnation, using a British Neolithic case study.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2014

An Experimental Study of Vertebrate Scavenging Behavior in a Northwest European Woodland Context

Alexandria Young; Richard A. Stillman; Martin J. Smith; Amanda H. Korstjens

Vertebrate scavengers can modify surface deposited human remains which can hinder forensic investigations. The effects of such scavenging vary between species and regions. Published research into the effects of the scavenging of human remains is dominated by work from North America with few studies covering Northwestern Europe. Forensic scientists, investigators, and police search officers in Northwestern Europe are often left questioning on a basic level as to which scavengers are active and how they might affect human remains. This paper presents the results of a field study utilizing deer (Cervus nippon; Capreolus capreolus) as surface deposits observed by motion detection cameras in a British woodland. The most common avian and rodent scavenger species recorded included the buzzard (Buteo buteo), carrion crow (Corvus corone), wood mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus), and gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis). The scavenging behaviors observed were affected by seasonality, rates of decomposition, and insect activity. Scavenging by buzzards, unlike carrion crows, was most frequent during fall to winter and prior to insect activity. Overall, avian scavengers modified and scavenged soft tissue. Rodents scavenged both fresh and skeletonized remains with gray squirrels only scavenging skeletal remains. Wood mice were most active in winter and scavenged both soft tissue and bone.


BMJ | 1974

Mesentericocaval "Jump" Graft in Management of Portal Hypertension: Experience with 24 Cases

Martin J. Smith; R. J. Tuft; A. R. Davidson; J.W. Laws; J. L. Dawson; Roger Williams

A series of 24 patients with cirrhosis have undergone mesentericocaval shunt operations for the relief of portal hypertension. Overall the results have been satisfactory. Four of the five patients treated as an emergency and 17 of the 19 who had the operation two to six weeks after haemorrhage had been controlled left hospital alive and well. Separation of the patients into three categories according to the findings of clinical and biochemical tests, however, showed that subsequent survival was satisfactory for patients in categories A and B but that all four patients in category C had died within one year after surgery. Assessment at three months showed that in three patients moderate hepatic encephalopathy had developed. Evidence that the shunt remains patent was shown by a low incidence of repeated gastrointestinal haemorrhage and a marked diminution in variceal size in 18 of the 19 cases examined serially. Radiographic techniques for confirming shunt patency were compared and cannulation of the graft via the femoral vein was found to provide a reliable and rapid means of assessment.


Antiquity | 2015

Craig Rhos-y-felin: a Welsh bluestone megalith quarry for Stonehenge

Mike Parker Pearson; R. E. Bevins; Rob Ixer; Joshua Pollard; Colin Richards; Kate Welham; Ben Chan; Kevan Edinborough; Derek Hamilton; Richard I. Macphail; Duncan Schlee; Jean-Luc Schwenninger; Ellen Simmons; Martin J. Smith

Abstract The long-distance transport of the bluestones from south Wales to Stonehenge is one of the most remarkable achievements of Neolithic societies in north-west Europe. Where precisely these stones were quarried, when they were extracted and how they were transported has long been a subject of speculation, experiment and controversy. The discovery of a megalithic bluestone quarry at Craig Rhos-y-felin in 2011 marked a turning point in this research. Subsequent excavations have provided details of the quarrying process along with direct dating evidence for the extraction of bluestone monoliths at this location, demonstrating both Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2014

Blast injury and the human skeleton: an important emerging aspect of conflict-related trauma.

Marie Christine Dussault; Martin J. Smith; David Osselton

Recent decades have seen an accelerating trend in warfare whereby a growing proportion of conflict‐related deaths have been caused by explosions. Analysis of blast injury features little in anthropological literature. We present a review of clinical literature that includes prevalence of injury to anatomical regions and potential indicators of blast injury which can be used by forensic anthropologists. This includes high prevalence of extremity (22.8–91.2%) and facial (19.6–40%) injury in combat contexts, lower limb fractures (19–74.3%) in suicide bombing, traumatic amputation (3–43%) and diffuse fracture patterns in terrorist bombings. Potential indicators of blast trauma include blowout fractures in sinus cavities from blast overpressure, transverse mandibular fractures, and visceral surface rib fractures. Ability to recognize blast trauma and distinguish it in the skeleton is of importance in investigations and judicial proceedings relating to war crimes, terrorism, and human rights violations and likely to become increasingly crucial to forensic anthropology knowledge.


Legal Medicine | 2015

Fantastic plastic? Experimental evaluation of polyurethane bone substitutes as proxies for human bone in trauma simulations

Martin J. Smith; Stephen James; Tim Pover; Nina Ball; Victoria Barnetson; Bethany Foster; Carl Guy; John Rickman; Virginia Walton

Recent years have seen steady improvements in the recognition and interpretation of violence related injuries in human skeletal remains. Such work has at times benefited from the involvement of biological anthropologists in forensic casework and has often relied upon comparison of documented examples with trauma observed in skeletal remains. In cases where no such example exists investigators must turn to experimentation. The selection of experimental samples is problematic as animal proxies may be too dissimilar to humans and human cadavers may be undesirable for a raft of reasons. The current article examines a third alternative in the form of polyurethane plates and spheres marketed as viable proxies for human bone in ballistic experiments. Through subjecting these samples to a range of impacts from both modern and archaic missile weapons it was established that such material generally responds similarly to bone on a broad, macroscopic scale but when examined in closer detail exhibits a range of dissimilarities that call for caution in extrapolating such results to real bone.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2014

Scanning Electron Microscope Analysis of Gunshot Defects to Bone: An Underutilized Source of Information on Ballistic Trauma

John Rickman; Martin J. Smith

Recent years have seen increasing involvement by forensic anthropologists in the interpretation of skeletal trauma. With regard to ballistic injuries, there is now a large literature detailing gross features of such trauma; however, less attention has been given to microscopic characteristics. This article presents analysis of experimentally induced gunshot trauma in animal bone (Bos taurus scapulae) using full metal jacket (FMJ), soft point (SP), and captive bolt projectiles. The results were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Additional analysis was conducted on a purported parietal gunshot lesion in a human cranial specimen. A range of features was observed in these samples suggesting that fibrolamellar bone response to projectile impact is analogous to that observed in synthetic composite laminates. The results indicate that direction of bullet travel can be discerned microscopically even when it is ambiguous on gross examination. It was also possible to distinguish SP from FMJ lesions. SEM analysis is therefore recommended as a previously underexploited tool in the analysis of ballistic trauma.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Lead Exposure in Adult Males in Urban Transvaal Province, South Africa during the Apartheid Era

Catherine A. Hess; Martin J. Smith; Clive N. Trueman; Holger Schutkowski

Human exposure to lead is a substantial public health hazard worldwide and is particularly problematic in the Republic of South Africa given the country’s late cessation of leaded petrol. Lead exposure is associated with a number of serious health issues and diseases including developmental and cognitive deficiency, hypertension and heart disease. Understanding the distribution of lifetime lead burden within a given population is critical for reducing exposure rates. Femoral bone from 101 deceased adult males living in urban Transvaal Province (now Gauteng Province), South Africa between 1960 and 1998 were analyzed for lead concentration by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS). Of the 72 black and 29 white individuals sampled, chronic lead exposure was apparent in nearly all individuals. White males showed significantly higher median bone lead concentration (ME = 10.04 µg·g−1), than black males (ME = 3.80 µg·g−1) despite higher socioeconomic status. Bone lead concentration covaries significantly, though weakly, with individual age. There was no significant temporal trend in bone lead concentration. These results indicate that long-term low to moderate lead exposure is the historical norm among South African males. Unexpectedly, this research indicates that white males in the sample population were more highly exposed to lead.


Archive | 2000

The Changing Role of Central Government Departments

Martin J. Smith; David Richards; David Marsh

Government departments are the key policy making institutions in British politics. Their primary role is to act as administrative units for British government, but, in addition, they also provide the focus of most policy processes. Despite their importance to the operation of the core executive, the functions of ministers, the development and implementation of policy, they have been much neglected as an area of academic study. Most attention has been paid to the role of the prime minister and Cabinet, while analyses of departments themselves remain few and far between (notable exceptions are Heclo and Wildavsky 1974; Rose 1988 and Hennessy 1989). Indeed, notions of prime ministerial government (King 1985; Hennessy 1986) and even presidentialism (Foley 1992; Pryce 1998) have skewed both the development of research in this area and the understanding of the operation of government.

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David Marsh

Australian National University

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Patrick Diamond

Queen Mary University of London

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