Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Following the recognition of constant and predictable colonization patterns and the knowledge about the dependence of the insect development to temperature, a new discipline, forensic entomology, has provided information useful to reconstruct criminal events. Funerary archaeoentomology has also applied the same rationale in archaeological contexts. Puparia represent a large fraction of the insect remains that can be found associated with a cadaver, especially when the body is mummified or in the advanced stages of decomposition. Puparium identification is still a problematic topic due to the lack of identification keys and, in several cases, a lack o...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Followin...
none3siFlies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. F...
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Followin...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
The discovery of dipteran remains on mummified individuals can lead to either cause for curatorial c...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Diptera puparia may represent both in forensic and archaeo-funerary contexts the majority of the en...
Diptera puparia may represent both in forensic and archaeo-funerary contexts the majority of the en...
The discovery of dipteran remains on mummified individuals can lead to either cause for curatorial c...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Followin...
none3siFlies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. F...
Flies and beetles are the main components of the entomofauna colonizing a body after death. Followin...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
The discovery of dipteran remains on mummified individuals can lead to either cause for curatorial c...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Background: A correct identification of species is fundamental in order to derive all the biological...
Diptera puparia may represent both in forensic and archaeo-funerary contexts the majority of the en...
Diptera puparia may represent both in forensic and archaeo-funerary contexts the majority of the en...
The discovery of dipteran remains on mummified individuals can lead to either cause for curatorial c...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 2001, Volume 96, Number 6, pp. 781-784 Distinction among the Puparia of Three...