When booth is trying to get sweets to sign the form the way he holds the pen changes.
First he is holding the top then the bottom and then back on the top.
First he is holding the top then the bottom and then back on the top.
When hodgins comes in to the bone room after they have figured out it was a pitch fork he is holding a file.
You can see it is open when the camera is on bones and angela but in the next scene he is opening the folder again.
You can see it is open when the camera is on bones and angela but in the next scene he is opening the folder again.
When booth is reading the file of the man murdered when they find out his name he is holding a page up but in the next scene he is not holding it up anymore.
When hodgins has his bug he leaves the table but in the next scene he is back at the table.
Bones speaks about Certified Organic not using pesticides, however, a variety of pesticides are permitted and regularly used in organic farming. Her statements on the subject also disagree with the scientific consensus on the safety of pesticides.
Dr Hodgins identifies the beetle as a Carpophilus nitidulidae. There is no species described with this scientific name. However, the name "nitidulidae" is a family of sap beetles (Nitidulidae). You would expect an entomologist to know the different classification levels of animals and not mix up a family name with a scientific name. The beetle is most likely the pineapple sap beetle, previously known as Carpophilus humeralis, but known as Urophorus humeralis since 2005.
Bones refers to Frank's shoulder Bones as scapuli, which translates to armpits in Latin. The appropriate word for the plural shoulder blades is scapulae, pronounced with a long a sound at the end, as in hay or way. A forensic anthropologist should know the proper term and pronunciation of this word.