| Air scent dog |
A search dog that will
detect airborne human scent. |
| Alert |
An indication by a search
dog that it has detected human scent. |
| Article search |
Search for any object or
article that may contain human scent and which may be
above or below ground. |
| Avalanche search |
Search for human victims of
an avalanche |
| Human Remains Detection search |
Search for human remains
that are on the surface or buried on land. |
| Certified |
Formally recognized by MASAR
as meeting MASAR standards. |
| Contaminated area |
An area containing air or
ground scents of persons other that the victim. |
| Disaster search |
Search for humans in rubble
or debris, such as collapsed buildings or debris piles,
that are a result of natural or human-caused disasters. |
| Dog
team |
One handler with one dog. |
| Handler |
The person who controls and
directs the dog during a search. This person does not
have to be the owner or trainer of the dog. |
| Heavy brush |
Ground cover which provides
difficult visual as well as physical obstacles to the
search team. |
| ICS |
Incident Command System |
| Moderate terrain |
Terrain having average ease
of walking, average visibility, and no extremes of
topography. |
| Probability of
Detection (POD) |
The percentage of
probability that if a subject was actually in the search
area that the subject would have been located (detected)
by the search effort. |
| Refind |
Locating the search subject
or article, and leading the handler back to the search
subject or article. |
| Scent article |
An item belonging to the
search subject, preferably clothing, that holds the
subject's scent and that has not been contaminated by the
scent(s) of other people. |
| Tracking/trailing
dog |
A search dog that will
follow the ground scent track/trail of a person who has
passed through the area in which the dog is searching. |
| Unit |
A group of single SAR
resources existing for the purpose of SAR training and
operations and demonstrating or providing documentation
of the following: 1. Unit organizational structure.
2. Unit standards and the date they were accepted.
3. List of unit members and their status, i.e.
operational, training, inactive, etc.
4. Documentation of past training.
5. Provisions for ongoing training.
6. Records of responses to actual searches, if any.
|
| Water search |
Search for humans who are
under water, such as a drowning victim. |