Truth
In Bones
Edward Liew
Doug Owsley is the curator of the department of anthropology,
skeletal biology, and forensic anthropology at the Smithsonian
Institution. He has helped to solve many mysteries such as
identifying unknown skeletons in mass graves in Croatia and to
help figure out historical puzzles surrounding bones dug up from
ancient cemeteries. Currently, he is working on the bones of Civil
War soldiers whose remains were discovered recently in
Centreville, VA, not far from the Battle of Bull Run.
Bones can
tell an enormous amount of information, including age, race, sex,
and possibly cause of death. Once certain details are taken,
Owsley can cross-reference historians to help identify who the
person was. Owsley frequently works with historians,
archaeologists, FBI agents, and police and scientists with
expertise in everything from botany to soil. Being in the
Washington area, he can work with many of the world's most
renowned scientists. "The work on historical burials",
Owsley says, "is beginning to answer questions that you
simply won't find in the history books.'' "Most people don't
know what you can learn from bones,'' he says, "and it's just
incredible. They'll speak volumes to you if you know how to read
them."
Anita Manning. "Smithsonian knows the truth in his
bones." USA Today, June 24, 1997.