After a long while, the laboratory fell into a deep silence.
The people gathered around the lab table glanced at each other, their eyes full of disbelief.
They looked at one another, their faces uniformly reflecting a mix of confusion and shock.
Can one really determine that the deceased died from a traffic accident just from this ominous White Bone alone?
This conclusion seems utterly fantastical to them.
Forensic pathology is indeed a profound discipline, and inferring the nature of death holds a pivotal position in solving the entire case.
However, restoring the entire process of injury formation merely from fracture marks on the White Bone, isn't this beyond the normal scope of professional understanding?
Everyone present knew well that a skeletonized corpse means the loss of soft tissue, an important basis for judgment, causing great difficulty in the identification work.
