Forensic Dentistry, Second Edition

(Barré) #1
death investigation systems 59


  1. Curran, W. J., et al. 1980. History and development. In Modern legal medicine,
    psychiatry, and forensic science, chap. 1. Philadelphia: F. A. Davis Company.

  2. Payne-James, J., et al. 2003. Forensic medicine: Clinical and pathologic aspects,
    5–12. San Francisco: Greenwich Medical Media.

  3. Fisher, R. S. 2006. History of forensic pathology and related laboratory sciences.
    In Medicolegal investigation of death, ed. W. U. Spitz, rev. M. S. Platt, 3–21.
    4th ed. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.

  4. Stark, M. 2000. A physician’s guide to clinical forensic medicine. Totowa, NJ:
    Humana Press.

  5. Amundsen, D., and G. Ferngren. 1977. The Physician as an Expert Witness in
    Athenian Law. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 51:202–213.

  6. Amundsen, D., and G. Ferngren. 1979. The forensic role of physicians in Roman
    law. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 53:39–56.

  7. Rolfe, J. C. (trans.). 1920. Suetonius. Vol I. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
    Press.

  8. Spitz, D. J. 2006. History and development of forensic medicine and pathology.
    In Spitz and Fisher’s medicolegal investigation of death, chap. 1. 4th ed. Springfield,
    IL: Charles C. Thomas.

  9. Amundsen, D., and G. Ferngren. 1978. The forensic role of physicians in
    Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 52:336–53.

  10. Barber, P. 1988. Vampires, burial, and death. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

  11. Sung Tz’u. 1981. The washing away of wrongs (Hsi Yuan Lu): Forensic medicine
    in thirteenth-century China, trans. B. McKnight. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese
    Studies, University of Michigan.

  12. Knight, B. 2007. CROWNER: Origins of the office of coroner. http://www.
    britannia .com/history/coroner1.html (accessed December 12, 2007).

  13. Holdsworth, W. 1903. A history of English law. London: Methuen & Co.

  14. Garland, A. N. 1987. Forensic medicine in Great Britain. I. The beginning.
    American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology 8:269–72.

  15. Mant, A. K. 1987. Forensic medicine in Great Britain. II. The origins of the
    British medicolegal system and some historic cases. American Journal of Forensic
    Medicine and Pathology 8:354–61.

  16. Davis, G. 1997. Mind your manners. Part I. History of death certification and
    manner of death classification. American Journal of Forensic Medicine and
    Pathology 18:219–23.

  17. Delaney, T. 1999. The Plymouth Colony Archive Project. Deacon Philip Walker,
    Sr., of Rehoboth, Plymoth Colony. http://www.histarch.uiuc.edu/plymouth/
    Walker.html (accessed June 17, 2008).

  18. Standing Bear, Z. G. 2005. Funeral Ethics Organization, Winter Newsletter 2005,
    pp. 1–3. http://www.funeralethics.org/winter05.pdf (accessed April 18, 2008).

  19. DiMaio, V., and D. DiMaio. 2001. Forensic pathology. 2nd ed. Boca Raton, FL:
    CRC Press.

  20. National Academy of Sciences. 2003. Medicolegal death investigation system:
    Workshop summary. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

  21. Eckert, W. 1987. Charles Norris (1868–1935) and Thomas A. Gonzales (1878–1956).
    New York’s forensic pioneers. American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology
    8:350–53.

Free download pdf