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12 Facts About Clyde Snow

1.

Clyde Snow was an American forensic anthropologist.

2.

Clyde Snow started his higher education at the New Mexico Military Institute where he earned an Associated Degree.

3.

In 1968, Snow became the head of the department of Forensic Anthropology at Civil Aeromedical Institute.

4.

On September 25,1978, Clyde Snow testified before the House Select Committee on Assassinations about various forensic aspects of the Kennedy assassination.

5.

Clyde Snow denied that E Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis were among the Three tramps found in a railroad car behind the Grassy Knoll.

6.

Clyde Snow worked with various human rights groups and brought to attention mass graves of civilians in Argentina, and spent five years training many of the founding members of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team.

7.

In 1991, Clyde Snow traveled to San Vicente, Bolivia, to search for the remains of the American outlaws Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

8.

In 1997, Clyde Snow worked on mass graves found in the territory of the former Yugoslavia.

9.

Clyde Snow participated in a re-enactment of an excavation of Butch Masters in Illinois that aired on The Discovery Channel episode Science Detectives on Discover Magazine.

10.

In 2004, Clyde Snow appeared on the Unsolved History documentary television series episode Hunting Nazis on The Discovery Channel.

11.

Clyde Snow continued teaching at the University of Oklahoma, and he did occasional lectures for Forensic Science organizations and law enforcement personnel.

12.

Clyde Snow died May 16,2014, aged 86, in Norman, Oklahoma.