7 research outputs found

    Cleaning deteriorated elements of ammunition: Development of a procedure applied to cartridge cases from the Second World War.

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    Deteriorated elements of ammunition can be found while investigating different types of events. Exposure to adverse environmental conditions may lead to metal alteration (corrosion) or organic material deposition (contaminations) on the exposed elements of ammunition. From a forensic perspective, both types of deterioration pose challenges when observing marks left by the firearms used to discharge the corresponding ammunition (e.g. firing pin, extractor). The longer the time of exposure to the adverse environmental conditions, the more challenging the observation of such marks. A literature review highlighted three previously published restorative methods used to clean deteriorated elements of ammunition. The aim of this research is to develop a cleaning procedure applicable to cartridge cases exposed to adverse environmental conditions, while avoiding the degradation of marks left by the firearms used to discharge the corresponding ammunition. A first batch of 21 brass cartridge cases dating back to the Second World War (WWII) was used to develop a cleaning sequence involving the three methods. The efficiency of each restorative method was qualitatively assessed using optical macroscopy and the Evofinder® ballistic identification system. The developed sequence relies on successive applications of Tickopur® TR 7 (a diluted soft metal cleaner), sulfuric acid and finally Aqua Regia (HCl 37% and HNO <sub>3</sub> 75%), all of them involving ultrasonic baths. The resulting cleaning sequence was subsequently applied to three batches of Second World War cartridge cases discovered in France and Russia. This sequential procedure allows the effective cleaning of WWII brass cartridge cases while highlighting different marks left by firing pins, extractors, ejectors, and breech faces. Applying a forensic analysis and comparison process to the marks highlighted on these elements of ammunition can support the verification of historical facts when reconstructing events which took place more than seventy years ago

    The development and validation of a Real Time Location System to reliably monitor everyday activities in natural contexts

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    The accurate measurement of behaviour is vitally important to many disciplines and practitioners of various kinds. While different methods have been used (such as observation, diaries, questionnaire), none are able to accurately monitor behaviour over the long term in the natural context of people's own lives. The aim of this work was therefore to develop and test a reliable system for unobtrusively monitoring various behaviours of multiple individuals within the same household over a period of several months. A commercial Real Time Location System was adapted to meet these requirements and subsequently validated in three households by monitoring various bathroom behaviours. The results indicate that the system is robust, can monitor behaviours over the long-term in different households and can reliably distinguish between individuals. Precision rates were high and consistent. Recall rates were less consistent across households and behaviours, although recall rates improved considerably with practice at set-up of the system. The achieved precision and recall rates were comparable to the rates observed in more controlled environments using more valid methods of ground truthing. These initial findings indicate that the system is a valuable, flexible and robust system for monitoring behaviour in its natural environment that would allow new research questions to be addressed

    Complexity in Deterministic, Nonlinear Business-Cycle Models — Foundations, Empirical Evidence, and Predictability

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