Dust on boots, baggage can track down suspects
Flinders University
Forensic science experts at Flinders University are refining an innovative counter-terrorism technique that checks for environmental DNA in the dust on clothing, baggage, shoes or even a passport.
The
Flinders-led research, led by postdoctoral research associate Dr Jennifer
Young, will developed a system to trace the source of dust on suspect articles
to match a soil profile of a specific area or overseas country.
"This
could help provide evidence of where a person of interest might have travelled
based on the environmental DNA signature from dust on their belongings,"
says Dr Young, from the College of Science and Engineering at Flinders
University.
"This microscopic environmental trace evidence, based on soil geochemical, bacterial and fungal analysis would complement and enhance current forensic intelligence tools," she says in new research in Forensic Science International: Genetics.
The
project has received a State Government Defence Innovation Partnership (DIP)
grant of almost $150,000 to develop the intelligence and forensic potential of
dust traces for counter-terrorism and national security, working with the
Australian Federal Police and university partners (University of Adelaide and
University of Canberra) to match the DNA extraction and amplification technique
to Australian soil profiles from Geosciences Australia.
Professor
Linacre, chair in Forensic DNA Technology at Flinders, says environmental
samples serve as ideal forms of contact trace evidence as detection at a scene
can establish a link between a suspect, location and victim.
"Environment
samples extracted via the 'massively parallel sequencing' technology provide
biological signatures from complex DNA mixtures and trace amounts of low
biomass samples," he says.
The
project is among more than $1 million in funding announced in the fourth round
of the Defence Innovation Partnership's Collaborative Research Fund.
InFoDust:
The intelligence and forensic potential of dust traces for counter-terrorism
and national security, led by Dr Young, will put the new technique on trial
with soil reference data from across Australia provided by partner Geoscience
Australia.
This
project will utilise a series of soils with contrasting properties to
understand the relationship between soil biogeochemical signals and the derived
dust signal under controlled conditions, before introducing environmental
variables through an 'in-situ' experiment.