Forensic Science International
Volume 162, Issue 1 , Pages 6-12, 16 October 2006

The forensic analysis of soils and sediment taken from the cast of a footprint

  • Peter A. Bull

      Affiliations

    • Oxford University Centre for the Environment, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 1865 275840.
  • ,
  • Adrian Parker

      Affiliations

    • Department of Geography, Oxford Brookes University, Headington Hill, Oxford, UK
  • ,
  • Ruth M. Morgan

      Affiliations

    • Oxford University Centre for the Environment, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK

published online 18 August 2006.

Abstract 

The routine production of a cast of a shoe-print taken in soil provides information other than shoe size and gait. Material adhering to the surface of the cast represents the preservation of the moment of footprint impression. The analysis of the interface between the cast and soil is therefore a potentially lucrative source of information for forensic reconstruction. These principles are demonstrated with reference to a murder case which took place in the English Midlands. The cast of a footprint provided evidence of a two-way transfer of material between the sole of a boot and the soil of a recently ploughed field. Lumps of soil, which had dried on a boot, were deposited on the field as the footprints were made. Pollen analysis of these lumps of soil indicated that the perpetrator of the imprint had been standing recently in a nearby stream. Fibre analysis together with physical and chemical characteristics of the soil suggested a provenance for contamination of this mud prior to deposition of the footprint. Carbon/nitrogen ratios of the water taken from the cast showed that distilled water had been used thus excluding the possibility of contamination of the boot–soil interface. It was possible to reconstruct three phases of previous activity of the wearer of the boot prior to leaving the footprint in the field after the murder had taken place. This analysis shows the power of integrating different independent techniques in the analysis of hitherto unrecognised forensic materials.

Keywords: Footprint cast, Soils and sediment, Forensic geoscience, Pollen, Scanning electron microscopy

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PII: S0379-0738(06)00467-1

doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2006.06.075

Forensic Science International
Volume 162, Issue 1 , Pages 6-12, 16 October 2006