Forensic facial reconstruction is a means for producing a facial surface from the skull. There are several technical approaches that can be applied, which include computerised and plastic sculptural methods. Whether the reconstruction is attempted in virtual or actual reality, the facial surface is projected by one of two principal means: by reconstruction of the craniofacial anatomy or by mathematical extrapolation of the face surface from that of the skull. More recently, it has been possible via a combination of the two. In this chapter, the history of facial reconstruction from the skull will be briefly introduced and the principal methods described. Both plastic and computational approaches will be summarised. The utility of forensic facial reconstruction will be discussed with reference to the investigation of cases of missing persons, and to current controversies in research and practice, relating to the precision and efficacy of the technique.Keywords: Facial reconstruction, facial approximation, forensic science, identification, missing persons, forensic anthropology Evison, M.P., Iwamura, E. S. M. and Guimarães, M.A.G. (2016). Forensic facial reconstruction and its contribution to identification in missing person cases. In Morewitz, S.J. and Sturdy Colls, C. (eds.), Handbook of Missing Persons, New York: Springer, p. 427-41. ISBN 978-3-319-10197-3 (print), 978-3-319-40199-7 (online) doi:10.1007/978-3-319-40199-7_28
INTRODUCTIONThe earliest attempts to reconstitute the face from the skull so far recognised appear to arise from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) culture of circa 11,000 -8,000 BP (Settegast 1990) centred on Jericho and adjacent regions of Jordan and the West Bank (Figure 1). Archaeologists interpret these objects as having played a role in funerary, ancestor-worship, or similar such rites. These reconstructions were completed by modelling a facial surface in plaster. The eyes and eyelids were often replaced with cowry shells, and the skin complexion and facial features-including moustaches-were painted onto the plaster surface. The reconstructions are described as 'typized and conventional' and are not believed to represent reconstructions of ante-mortem appearance, beyond 'some features determined by the bony framework' (Strouhal 1973, p. 231). Nine millennia were to pass before the first scientific attempts to reconstruct ante-mortem appearance were to arise.As empirical science grew in significance during the 18th and 19th centuries, efforts were made to collect measurements that could be applied to the hard-tissue surface of the skull in order to project the location of the soft-tissue surface. These tissue-depth measurements were collected from cadavers at specific locations on the face surface; referred to as landmarks. These measurements were then applied to roughly corresponding landmarks on the skull which is the subject of a facial reconstruction (Kollman and Buchly 1898). Early attempts at facial reconstruction were applied to sculputural portraits of Johann Sebast...