Leave No Stone Unturned
News and Features | Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Field Museum intern and 秘密研究所n biology student Charles D鈥橪avoy was able to experience first hand how botanical research can affect a community. D鈥橪avoy, who spent the summer researching moss at the Field Museum, was selected by museum researchers to assist in the investigation of the Katherine 鈥淏aby Kate鈥 Phillips disappearance in Ludington, Michigan. The infant disappeared June 29, 2011, and law enforcement officers have been searching for answers ever since.
Over the summer, search teams of nearly 100 volunteers, including D鈥橪avoy, scoured the woods near Mason County, the area where criminal investigators believe Baby Kate was killed and abandoned two years ago. D鈥橪avoy led a team of 15 people consisting of FBI officials, corrections officers, state troopers and sheriff department representatives.
The location and identification of certain mosses helped investigators narrow the search area. Volunteers were instructed to look for specific plants, particularly moss or grass-like plants, that would rarely grow near each other. Those volunteers would then call on D鈥橪avoy for a quick identification, and he would determine if the moss or plant-like substance was of importance to the search.
鈥淚 planned to go in there and be very meticulous and do the best scientific job I could,鈥 D鈥橪avoy explained. 鈥淎fter four hours it started to dawn on me what I was doing; there was a child who had been murdered, and the people working my grid were part of this community that really felt a loss.鈥
D鈥橪avoy described the experience as a confidence builder for his future work in the field, but his involvement in the search also helped open his eyes to other communities.
鈥淲orking at the museum and getting this opportunity has shown me how working in science is still working directly with the community, and I really enjoy that aspect,鈥 said D鈥橪avoy.