塔拉瓦项目第一部分:解决塔拉瓦战役中混合人类遗骸的多学科方法

Rebecca J. Taylor, Audrey L. Scott, Anthony J. Koehl, Willard R. Trask, H. Maijanen
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引用次数: 9

摘要

作为第二次世界大战期间美国海军对日本战役的一部分,1943年11月的塔拉瓦战役导致1100多名美军和6000多名日本和韩国义务兵在基里巴斯共和国塔拉瓦环礁的比蒂奥岛及其周围地区伤亡。伤亡人员被埋在孤立的乱葬坑中,这些乱葬坑受到战时岛上整修的负面影响,导致在20世纪40年代后期只有47%的遗骸被发现。战时墓葬的性质、战后多次挖掘和再埋葬、20世纪40年代末的身份识别工作,以及战后当地居民对该岛的人为改变,都导致了伤亡人数的混合。美国国防部战俘/失踪人员核算局于2016年建立了塔拉瓦项目,以协助对直接从基里巴斯共和国找到的经常混合的遗骸进行分类、联系和鉴定,以及从夏威夷檀香山太平洋国家纪念公墓挖掘出的94具塔拉瓦战役无名士兵的棺材。该项目已经能够根据独特的线粒体DNA (mtDNA)序列确认最小个体数(MNI)为243个,而约9,000个元素的库存表明,发掘的MNI为131个,最近现场回收的MNI为96个。塔拉瓦项目结合了历史研究、DNA测试、胸部x光片和牙学比较、法医人类学和物证分析,帮助确定了自20世纪40年代以来塔拉瓦战役中84名服役人员中的41名。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Tarawa Project Part I: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Resolve Commingled Human Remains from the Battle of Tarawa
As part of the U.S. Navy’s campaign against the Japanese during World War II, the Battle of Tarawa in November 1943 resulted in over 1,100 U.S. and over 6,000 Japanese and Korean conscript casualties on and around Betio Island, Tarawa Atoll, Republic of Kiribati. Casualties were buried in isolated and mass graves, which were negatively affected by the wartime renovations of the island, resulting in only ~47% of the remains being recovered in the late 1940s. The nature of the wartime burials, multiple postwar disinterments and reinterments, identification efforts in the late 1940s, and postwar anthropogenic changes to the island by the local population have contributed to the commingling of casualties. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency established the Tarawa Project in 2016 to assist in the sorting, association, and identification of the often commingled remains recovered directly from the Republic of Kiribati and 94 caskets of Battle of Tarawa unknowns disinterred from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Honolulu, Hawai’i. The project has been able to confirm a minimum number of individuals (MNI) of 243 based on unique mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences, while inventory of ~9,000 elements indicates a MNI of 131 from disinterments and 96 from recent field recoveries. The Tarawa Project has used a combination of historical research, DNA testing, chest radiograph and odontological comparisons, and forensic anthropological and material evidence analyses to help identify 41 of the 84 total service members accounted for from the Battle of Tarawa since the 1940s.
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