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David O Carter

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Articles 40
Citations 829
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Recent Articles
1.
Furuta K, Byrne J, Luat K, Cheung C, Carter D, Tipton L, et al.
J Chromatogr A . 2024 May; 1728:465017. PMID: 38797136
Decomposition odor is produced during postmortem mammalian tissue breakdown by bacteria, insects, and intrinsic chemical processes. Past research has not thoroughly investigated which volatile organic compounds (VOCs) can be linked...
2.
Burcham Z, Belk A, McGivern B, Bouslimani A, Ghadermazi P, Martino C, et al.
Nat Microbiol . 2024 Feb; 9(3):595-613. PMID: 38347104
Microbial breakdown of organic matter is one of the most important processes on Earth, yet the controls of decomposition are poorly understood. Here we track 36 terrestrial human cadavers in...
3.
Carter D, Orimoto A, Gutierrez C, Ribereau-Gayon A, Pecsi E, Perrault K, et al.
Forensic Sci Int Synerg . 2023 Aug; 7:100345. PMID: 37609572
Decomposition studies have been conducted in several regions of the world, but relatively few have investigated taphonomy in tropical environments. Even fewer have explored carcass decomposition during multiple tropical seasons,...
4.
Dawson B, Ueland M, Carter D, Mclntyre D, Barton P
Int J Legal Med . 2023 Jul; 138(2):509-518. PMID: 37491634
Knowledge of the decomposition of vertebrate animals has advanced considerably in recent years and revealed complex interactions among biological and environmental factors that affect rates of decay. Yet this complexity...
5.
Ribereau-Gayon A, Carter D, Forbes S
J Forensic Sci . 2023 Jan; 68(2):536-548. PMID: 36645695
The published literature shows a lack of methods to evaluate the patterns and extent of decomposition of human remains and to estimate the post-mortem interval (PMI) in humid, continental (Dfb)...
6.
Emmons A, Mundorff A, Hoeland K, Davoren J, Keenan S, Carter D, et al.
mSystems . 2022 Mar; 7(2):e0004122. PMID: 35353006
Bones and teeth can provide a lasting resource to identify human remains following decomposition. Bone can support dynamic communities of micro- and macroscopic scavengers and incidental taxa, which influence the...
7.
Deel H, Emmons A, Kiely J, Damann F, Carter D, Lynne A, et al.
mSphere . 2021 Jul; 6(4):e0045521. PMID: 34259562
The bones of decomposing vertebrates are colonized by a succession of diverse microbial communities. If this succession is similar across individuals, microbes may provide clues about the postmortem interval (PMI)...
8.
Mickleburgh H, Schwalbe E, Bonicelli A, Mizukami H, Sellitto F, Starace S, et al.
J Proteome Res . 2021 Mar; 20(5):2533-2546. PMID: 33683123
Bone proteomic studies using animal proxies and skeletonized human remains have delivered encouraging results in the search for potential biomarkers for precise and accurate post-mortem interval (PMI) and the age-at-death...
9.
Emmons A, Mundorff A, Keenan S, Davoren J, Andronowski J, Carter D, et al.
PLoS One . 2020 Jul; 15(7):e0218636. PMID: 32639969
Microbial colonization of bone is an important mechanism of postmortem skeletal degradation. However, the types and distributions of bone and tooth colonizing microbes are not well characterized. It is unknown...
10.
Cernosek T, Eckert K, Carter D, Perrault K
J Forensic Sci . 2019 Sep; 65(1):134-143. PMID: 31479524
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are by-products of cadaveric decomposition and are responsible for the odor associated with decomposing remains. The direct link between VOC production and individual postmortem microbes has...