Postmortem scavenging by the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana): Impact on taphonomic assemblages and progression.

[1]  D. Wescott,et al.  Comparison of decomposition rates between autopsied and non-autopsied human remains. , 2014, Forensic science international.

[2]  S. Tafuri,et al.  Bodies in sequestered and non-sequestered aquatic environments: a comparative taphonomic study using decompositional scoring system. , 2014, Science & justice : journal of the Forensic Science Society.

[3]  A. Giordano,et al.  Spatial patterning of vulture scavenged human remains. , 2012, Forensic science international.

[4]  J. Koprowski,et al.  Virginia Opossum (Didelphis Virginiana Virginiana) from Yavapai County, Arizona , 2011 .

[5]  J. Beasley,et al.  Mesopredators dominate competition for carrion in an agricultural landscape , 2011 .

[6]  S. Forbes,et al.  Forensically significant scavenging guilds in the southwest of Western Australia. , 2010, Forensic science international.

[7]  A. Peterson,et al.  Scavenging activity can produce predictable patterns in surface skeletal remains scattering: observations and comments from two experiments. , 2009, Forensic science international.

[8]  Nicole M Reeves Taphonomic Effects of Vulture Scavenging * , 2009, Journal of forensic sciences.

[9]  D. Engle,et al.  Relative Abundance of Mesopredators and Size of Oak Patches in the Cross-Timbers Ecoregion , 2008 .

[10]  T. Simmons,et al.  The Effect of Repeated Physical Disturbance on Soft Tissue Decomposition—Are Taphonomic Studies an Accurate Reflection of Decomposition? * , 2007, Journal of forensic sciences.

[11]  S. Forbes,et al.  A preliminary investigation into the scavenging activity on pig carcasses in Western Australia , 2007, Forensic science, medicine, and pathology.

[12]  W. Lord,et al.  Taphonomy of Child‐Sized Remains: A Study of Scattering and Scavenging in Virginia, USA * , 2006, Journal of forensic sciences.

[13]  Mary S Megyesi,et al.  Using accumulated degree-days to estimate the postmortem interval from decomposed human remains. , 2005, Journal of forensic sciences.

[14]  G. Di Vella,et al.  Factors affecting decomposition and Diptera colonization. , 2001, Forensic science international.

[15]  F. Patel Artefact in forensic medicine: postmortem rodent activity. , 1994, Journal of forensic sciences.

[16]  W. Haglund Contribution of rodents to postmortem artifacts of bone and soft tissue. , 1992, Journal of forensic sciences.

[17]  L. Snyder,et al.  Canid modification of human remains: implications for time-since-death estimations. , 1989, Journal of forensic sciences.

[18]  D T Reay,et al.  Canid scavenging/disarticulation sequence of human remains in the Pacific Northwest. , 1989, Journal of forensic sciences.

[19]  D. R. Swindler,et al.  Tooth mark artifacts and survival of bones in animal scavenged human skeletons. , 1988, Journal of forensic sciences.