4.3 Article

Use of craniometric data to facilitate migrant identifications at the United States/Mexico border

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 175, Issue 2, Pages 486-496

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.24241

Keywords

biological distance; craniometric data; forensic anthropology; migrant; population affinity

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Estimations of population affinity derived from craniometric data can aid in the identification of migrant remains and provide geographic origin information. The study suggests that current reference data in forensic anthropology should be replaced with data from positive identifications.
Objectives Thousands of migrants have died along the United States/Mexico border and many remain unidentified. The purpose of this research is to test whether estimations of population affinity, derived from craniometric data, can facilitate identification of migrant remains and provide a geographic region of origin rather than the broad label Hispanic. The appropriateness of current forensic reference data will also be assessed. Methods A case study combined with craniometric data from positively identified and unidentified migrants from the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner (n = 489) in Arizona and operation identification (n = 201) in Texas were compared to skeletal data representing Guatemalan (n = 87) and Mexican (n = 65) Mayans. Biological distance and discriminant function analyses were used to assess overall population relationships and classificatory models for forensic anthropological application. Results The majority of evidence indicates that estimations of population affinity can assist in the facilitation identification of migrant remains, even when a broad classification is used. Biological distances among the groups suggest that positively identified Guatemalan and Mexican migrants are similar to one another but differ from Guatemalan and Mexican Mayans. Conclusions Population affinity estimations can aid migrant identification, and current reference data used in forensic anthropological practice should be replaced with data from positive identifications. Estimates of geographic origin may be more useful than the broad generic term Hispanic for narrowing down the search for a missing person, but more data and research is needed to achieve this goal. Although, the utility of geographic origin estimates relies on transnational data centralization and sharing, which is not always the case.

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