Now the secrets of every big murder mystery will be revealed! The bodies were packed in 70 suitcases; scientists are doing research

 Now the secrets of every big murder mystery will be revealed!  The bodies were packed in 70 suitcases;  scientists are doing research

London. There have been many such murders in the world, whose killers have not been identified. Vicious killers destroy all the evidence without delay. From police to forensic experts… all the investigating officers are procrastinating. But soon it will help in catching these killers. Actually scientists are doing a research in Australia. Under this, the carcasses of 70 animals have been kept in different suitcases and left to rot.

According to scientists, this research will know how many days the dead bodies are rotting. It is being said that this will help the investigating agencies to trace the killers. This research is being done in the forests of Western Australia. This is the largest and first research in the world. Researchers are measuring how any change in temperature affects the dead animals. Along with this, microbiological and chemical changes will also be seen in the body and bones.

research will help
Speaking to the British newspaper Mirror, Paola Magny, Senior Lecturer in Forensic Science at Murdoch University, said that every year dozens of dead bodies are found that decompose inside homes. He removes the dead body from the spot and throws it at another place.

When will the results come?
The experiment began in early 2022 (in the Southern Hemisphere) and is scheduled to end in the summer. The results are expected to be presented in February 2023 at the world’s largest forensic science conference. The team of scientists will also look at the effect of insects on the carcasses. It will be tried to find out after how many days the worms appear on the body.

What is the effect on dead body?
After death the forensic specialist has about three days after the death. However, any insect found in the body can provide information about the days, months and years after death. The study is providing the first important data for analyzing bodies found in such environments and will provide “new information to add to a forensic entomologist’s toolbox.”

tags: australia, OMG News, science news

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