How technology and art helped bring the dead's faces to life

The primary use of facial reconstruction in forensics is to identify human remains and reunite them with their relatives for burial or memorialization. The method has a strong hold over our minds. Typically, these images are created after other identifying techniques have failed. Typically, it's an extremely risky final resort. This is possibly why it might seem miraculous when forensic portrayals, despite their inherent technological limitations, result in recognition, adding a crucial and frequently long-needed piece to an investigation's puzzle. When facial reconstruction is used in archaeological study, its cultural impact is most apparent. The ability to depict historical figures as persons rather than as examples helps viewers visualise them. The facial picture develops into a potent and sophisticated medium, promoting links between historical occurrences and individual life paths and reinstating a certain level of personhood. The development of imaging techno...