Sharp force trauma is routinely encountered in forensic practice. Often the question is posed, how much pressure or energy would have been necessary to inflict a cut with a specific knife, in order to further characterize the perpetrator or determine his intent to cause harm. This paper investigates two knife blades and its individual pressures needed to cut through the epidermis and dermis. In order to examine the necessary force for cutting through the skin, we performed experiments on a piglet skin-on-gelatin phantom. Two similarly small knives—a paring knife with a serrated blade and a Swiss Army pocket knife with a smooth blade—were moved over the phantom surface using a mobile cutting apparatus with varying weight on the load arm with...
Stab wounds produced by serrated blades are generally indistinguishable from stab wounds produced by...
This paper presents an investigation into the sharpness of a surgical scalpel blade. An experiment w...
In forensic anthropology the analysis of microscopic tool marks found in skeletal sharp force trauma...
This paper describes the development and use of a biaxial measurement device to analyse the mechanic...
In forensic contexts, understanding of the complicated relationships between level of force, type of...
A considerable number of homicides in the UK are committed by stabbing. While tool mark analysis is ...
The commonest way of killing in the UK is by a sharp instrument. Knight reported in 1975 that it is ...
The aim of this research was to experimentally determine the characteristics of incised bone wounds,...
In determining the possibility that a specific weapon was responsible for a specific injury it is of...
Although sharp force trauma is not the most common form of homicide in the United States, it account...
The commonest way of killing in the UK is by asharp instrument. Knight reported in 1975 that it is i...
The magnitude of force used in a stabbing incident can be difficult to quantify, although the estima...
Sharp force trauma (SFT) is a mechanism of traumatic injury in which a tool with a pointed or slante...
Nearly 40% of murders in the UK result from sharp force trauma caused by knives. Weapon-wound matchi...
Stab wounds produced by serrated blades are generally indistinguishable from stab wounds produced by...
This paper presents an investigation into the sharpness of a surgical scalpel blade. An experiment w...
In forensic anthropology the analysis of microscopic tool marks found in skeletal sharp force trauma...
This paper describes the development and use of a biaxial measurement device to analyse the mechanic...
In forensic contexts, understanding of the complicated relationships between level of force, type of...
A considerable number of homicides in the UK are committed by stabbing. While tool mark analysis is ...
The commonest way of killing in the UK is by a sharp instrument. Knight reported in 1975 that it is ...
The aim of this research was to experimentally determine the characteristics of incised bone wounds,...
In determining the possibility that a specific weapon was responsible for a specific injury it is of...
Although sharp force trauma is not the most common form of homicide in the United States, it account...
The commonest way of killing in the UK is by asharp instrument. Knight reported in 1975 that it is i...
The magnitude of force used in a stabbing incident can be difficult to quantify, although the estima...
Sharp force trauma (SFT) is a mechanism of traumatic injury in which a tool with a pointed or slante...
Nearly 40% of murders in the UK result from sharp force trauma caused by knives. Weapon-wound matchi...
Stab wounds produced by serrated blades are generally indistinguishable from stab wounds produced by...
This paper presents an investigation into the sharpness of a surgical scalpel blade. An experiment w...
In forensic anthropology the analysis of microscopic tool marks found in skeletal sharp force trauma...