Radiography plays a vital role in today's forensic society. “Forensic investigations can help identify victims of a mass casualty event, lead to the development of improved technologies to prevent future deaths, or make the difference between acquittal and conviction in a court of law.” Forensic radiography, in short, is the use of radiographic techniques that accompany the legal use of such images. Since its discovery in 1895, forensic radiography has made advances into other scientific areas, such as X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF), skeletal scintigraphy (nuclear bone scan), virtopsy (virtual autopsy), multidetector computed tomography ( MDCT) and neuroimaging. thus attributing a large number of ante- and post-mortem cases. Forensic radiography plays a vital role in archaeology, paleontology, art forgery and drug smuggling (body packers). Adequate training and impeccable knowledge are critical for a successful x-ray to be admissible as evidence in a civil or criminal court proceeding. On November 8, 1895, Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, a German physicist, disc...
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