Scientist bottles smell of bones to help solve cold cases
The Hindu
A Belgian research scientist is working with the federal police to create a scent that mimics the smell of dried human bones to help sniffer dogs find long lost remains.
A Belgian research scientist is working with the federal police to create a scent that mimics the smell of dried human bones to help sniffer dogs find long lost remains.
Clement Martin has already isolated the smell of decomposing human flesh and that is now used to train Belgium’s cadaver dogs.
But once the soft tissue has disappeared, the scent molecules of the remaining bones become significantly fewer, scientific researcher Martin told Reuters.
“Bones smell different over the years too. A 3-year-old bone will smell different to a 10-year-old one and even 20 years,” he said.
Skeletal remains are porous too and absorb smells from the surrounding environment, from the soil to pine trees.
“In the situation of cold cases, there was a gap. Our dogs were not able to find dried bones,” Kris Cardoen, head of federal police dog training, told Reuters.
At a police training centre outside Brussels, inspector Kristof Van Langenhove and his springer spaniel Bones demonstrated part of the training with Martin’s corpse scent.