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Examination of Hacking and Blunt Force Skeletal Trauma
Authors:Breana N Peace MS  James T Pokines PhD  Peter M Cummings MSc  MD  Allen G Harbaugh PhD
Institution:1. Forensic Anthropology Program, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 02118;2. Forensic Anthropology Program, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 02118

Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Boston, MA, 02118;3. MS in Statistical Practice Program, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Boston University College of Arts & Sciences, Boston, MA, 02115

Mathematics and Computer Science Department, Longwood University Cook-Cole College of Arts & Sciences, Farmville, VA, 23909

Abstract:Hacking trauma is prevalent in forensic cases involving genocide and dismemberment, but research into the identification of this type of trauma is lacking. The present study examines characteristics of hacking and blunt force skeletal trauma in order to determine if there is a point at which blunt force trauma becomes distinguishable from hacking trauma. Ten implements with a range of blade angles (i.e., the striking surface of the implement) were used in conjunction with a controlled-force hacking device to impact 100 limb bones of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus). Observations of the trauma included the occurrence and degree of fragmentation, the entrance widths of the impacts, and composite scores of six hacking characteristics, especially the distinctive V-shaped kerf. ANOVA tests and regression analyses were used to assess the relationships between these characteristics and the blade angles. A significant relationship (p-value = 0.011) was found between the composite hacking scores and the blade angles, indicating that blunt force and hacking trauma can be distinguished. The entrance widths of the impacts exhibited a significant relationship with the blade angles (p-value = 0.037). There was also a significant relationship between the visibility of a V-shaped kerf in the bones (p-value = 0.003), with visibility decreasing around the 60° blade angle. These data should assist in establishing guidelines to differentiate hacking and blunt force skeletal trauma in cases where the implement is on a spectrum between sharp and blunt.
Keywords:forensic anthropology  trauma analysis  trauma interpretation  hacking trauma  blunt force trauma  skeletal trauma
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