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      • Forensic scientist Mark Benecke investigates the death of Adolf Hitler and takes viewers from The Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, to Lausanne Switzerland and then deep into Russian archives where fascinating evidence has been kept secret for almost half a century.
      tv.apple.com/au/show/hunt-for-hitler--hitlers-skull/umc.cmc.1ogiqftwu4j0bz92wna1pnrow
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mark_BeneckeMark Benecke - Wikipedia

    Benecke has worked on the identification of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun's dental remains in Moscow (as well as a skull fragment claimed to be Hitler's). [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Notably, he argued (in line with early investigator Hugh Trevor-Roper ) that body water would hinder an open-air cremation.

  3. Dec 16, 2013 · He could identify shiny structures (metal artifacts) on the sides, and severe paradontosis of the lower front teeth in the movies as well as in the actual teeth. Weird fact no. 3: Hitler's teeth were so bad — and uniquely bad — that his teeth alone made it possible to identify his corpse.

  4. Dec 12, 2022 · Hitler’s teeth were so bad that his dental profile alone made it possible to identify his corpse. The state of his teeth might also explain why everybody complained about the Nazi leader’s chronic bad breath.

    • Who is Mark Benecke in Hitler's skull?1
    • Who is Mark Benecke in Hitler's skull?2
    • Who is Mark Benecke in Hitler's skull?3
    • Who is Mark Benecke in Hitler's skull?4
    • Who is Mark Benecke in Hitler's skull?5
  5. May 21, 2018 · "Hitler's teeth were so bad — and uniquely bad — that his teeth alone made it possible to identify his corpse," the forensic pathologist Mark Benecke, who was hired by National Geographic...

  6. Oct 17, 2015 · A few years ago I have seen a presentation by Mark Benecke, a forensic biologist, here in Cologne (Germany). He was among the scientists who took the DNA samples from the skull. According to him, the fragments had been touched by everyone in the Russian institute, so the DNA could have been from one of the scientists in the lab.

  7. In Hitler’s Skull, forensic scientist Mark Benecke investigates the death of Adolf Hitler and takes viewers from the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, to Lausanne Switzerland and into a Russian archive where fascinating evidence has been kept secret for almost half a century.

  8. Hitler's teeth were so bad — and uniquely bad — that his teeth alone made it possible to identify his corpse. The state of his teeth might also explain why everybody complained about Hitler's oral malodor.

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