Preliminary considerations for crime scene analysis in cases of animals affected by homemade ammonium nitrate and aluminum powder anti-personnel landmines in Colombia: Characteristics and effects
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Jaramillo Gutiérrez, Carlos
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Preliminary considerations for crime scene analysis in cases of animals affected by homemade ammonium nitrate and aluminum powder anti-personnel landmines in Colombia: Characteristics and effects
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Simple Summary: Anti-personnel landmines are a major problem in countries that are subject to
internal conflicts of a military or public order nature. They also continue to be a great threat to the
population and biodiversity, even in post-conflict stages. Those most often used by armed groups
are simple or homemade antipersonnel landmines that are designed without any type of technical
regulations and standardized production systems. Their low-cost manufacturing and the use of
easily accessible explosive substances for agricultural use, such as ammonium, have allowed their
indiscriminate use, turning them into a huge public health problem. They are only detected when
people or animals activate them, because they do not contain any materials that are detectable by
traditional means. The scant literature on these artifacts focuses on injuries caused to humans, and
only incidentally on field work. The objective of our study was to describe the behavior of a controlled
explosion of a homemade antipersonnel landmine, and to verify the effects caused by the explosion
on fauna and the environment. The results enable us to provide guidelines that may be implemented
during field investigations, in which forensic veterinarians and related disciplines participate. Abstract: During the armed conflict in Colombia, homemade improvised antipersonnel landmines
were used to neutralize the adversary. Many active artifacts remain buried, causing damage to
biodiversity by exploding. The extensive literature describes the effects and injuries caused to humans
by conventional landmines. However, there is considerably less information on the behavior and
effects of homemade antipersonnel landmines on fauna and good field investigation practices. Our
objectives were to describe the characteristics of a controlled explosion of a homemade antipersonnel
landmine (using ammonium nitrate as an explosive substance), to compare the effectiveness of
some evidence search patterns used in forensic investigation, and to determine the effects on a
piece of an animal carcass. The explosion generated a shock wave and an exothermic reaction,
generating physical effects on the ground and surrounding structures near the point of explosion. The amputation of the foot in direct contact with the device during the explosion and multiple fractures
were the main effects on the animal carcass. Finally, it was determined that finding evidence was
more effective in a smaller search area. Many factors can influence the results, which must be weighed
when interpreting the results, as discussed in this manuscript.
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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Animals 2022, 12, 1938
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