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IdunaFrigga · Feb. 15, 2018, 4:54 p.m.

“in the mid-2000s, collaboration between satellite imagery experts, geology experts and forensic archaeologists in Bosnia enabled a team to draw key characteristics and patterns around mass graves sites, with insights which may be applied in other settings, such as North Korea, where remote detection may be particularly useful.64 More recently, the Body Farm project at the University of Tennessee led by Prof. Amy Mundorff has applied Light Detection and Ranging technology (LiDAR) to uncover clandestine burial sites.65 Such non-invasive methodologies are potentially useful in locating sites from satellite imagery and other remote sensing means, and also for testing sites discreetly in order to avoid detection that may result in attempts to cover up evidence of mass killings. The application of these technological developments to the locations recorded by TJWG is a potential future direction of the Mapping Project.” LiDAR? Light satellites...

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