Organ Farms and Body Donors
caption translation: When you do not donate your organs, you take somebody with you
Lisa S -- In an April '08 Edmonton Journal story, reporter Chris Zdeb writes that Canada has one of the lowest organ donation rates in the industrialized world - 13 donors per million people, compared with 20 per million in the US and over 31 per million in Spain (over 31 per million, but not 32 per million? Sometims journalist-speak eludes me). Health Canada is understandably not happy about this situation, since each organ and tissue donor can help up to 80 people. 80!
With this in mind, I was interested to read that Texas State University-San Marcos will have a new body farm late this spring or early this summer. A body farm is a large enclosure in which forensic scientists leave corpses so that forensic anthropology students can study patterns of decay, insect colonizations, and the effects of different containers (like car trunks and shallow graves) on this evidence. The body farm is populated with corpses of people who left their remains to science for study.
Isn’t that bizarre? On one hand, we have people who refuse to give up their organs at all, and who cares how many people die waiting for working parts. On the other, we have people willing to have their bodies eaten by insects like blowflies and beetles for science. Of course it all comes down to our own individual relationship with death. I get that. But it still sticks in my craw, cause it's so damn selfish and superstitious to refuse to posthumously part with your guts and tissues.
Donate your damn organs people. Dead bodies don’t need lungs. Not even to make a good-looking corpse.
Lisa S. -- Fingerprints are a useful tool for detection, but only if they can be matched to a fingerprint which law enforcement already has on record, or if they can be compared to the prints of a suspect.
Lisa S. -- Raising a reader is a rewarding experience for a parent, and not just because when kids are reading they are both still and quiet. Mysteries certainly have a place in classic children’s books; consider chestnuts like Nancy Drew or the Famous Five (or Encyclopedia Brown, as mentioned a couple of posts ago). As a kid, I even followed the sleuthing adventures of Bunnicula’s Chester and Harold.
Lisa S. -- In November 2007, a study by LW Sherman published in the Journal of Experimental Criminology showed that “most crime is committed by a small fraction of all criminals, at a tiny fraction of all locations, against a tiny fraction of all victims, during a few hours a week”. [via
My first few forays into crime fiction were with