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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You are a forensic anthropologist working in a country that had a civil war 30 years ago. During the fighting, many civilians were shot and buried in mass graves. You have discovered one of these mass graves and are sorting through the skeletal remains in hopes of identifying the people buried there.

"Often, a family member has been looking for a disappeared loved one for many years," says Stefan Schmitt, a forensic anthropologist in Florida. "They are mothers, sons and fathers."

The Rodriguez family believes that their father might have been buried in this grave. You find skeletal remains that seem to match up to the description of this man. The skeleton is the same height, age and has a cleft chin like their father.

The family is desperate to recover their father so that they can put closure on this horrific event. The skeleton you have found is more than likely their father's. But you haven't found any dental records or conclusive evidence to make you believe 100 percent that it is him.

What do you do?