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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Steroid fingerprints: Efficient biomarkers of human decomposition fluids in soil
Robert W. MayesSabine FiedlerLorna DawsonJago Jonathan BirkBarbara Von Der Lühesubject
Total organic carbonHuman cadaverSoil testChemistrymedicine.medical_treatmentSoil organic matterSoil surface010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesDecompositionSteroidCoprostanol03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineGeochemistry and PetrologyEnvironmental chemistrymedicine030216 legal & forensic medicine0105 earth and related environmental sciencesdescription
Abstract The decomposition of animal and human cadavers can lead to comprehensive chemical and biochemical changes in soil, which can provide helpful information for the analysis of archaeological and crime scenes. The current study focused specifically on the concentration and distribution patterns of steroids in soil with the aim of assessing their suitability for demonstrating the presence of human decomposition products. Soil samples were collected from a forensic site where a human corpse had been lying on the soil surface for 18 days. Total organic carbon (TOC) and steroid concentrations were analysed in soil samples taken from beneath the body at the time the corpse was removed and also one year later. High concentrations of TOC and steroids were detected close to the soil surface at the time the body was removed, and the concentration of cadaver-derived cholesterol was considerably higher than that of the plant-derived sitosterol. The soil beneath the cadaver contained higher concentrations of faeces-derived 5β-stanol coprostanol than the control soil. Different concentrations and distribution patterns of steroid compounds in the soil upon removal of the corpse and one year later indicate that significant transformation, degradation and translocation processes had taken place during this period of time. The depth distribution of steroids beneath a decomposing body along with changes in the human steroidal fingerprints in soil over time were found to provide information that could help resolve forensic and archaeological issues. The combined analysis of tissue steroids (cholesterol), the reduction product of cholesterol in soil (5α-cholestanol) as well as faecal steroids (coprostanol, 5β-stigmastanol and their conversion products epicoprostanol and epi-5β-stigmastanol) represent excellent additions to the forensic toolbox for determining whether a soil of interest has ever been affected by a human cadaver or not.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-10-01 | Organic Geochemistry |