Fingerprint Basics
Fingerprint Patterns
Known Prints & Exemplars
Latent Prints & Biology
Biometrics and AFIS
100

This type os forensic evidence has been used for over 100 years to identify suspects and victims. 

What are fingerprints?

100

This is the most common fingerprint pattern, found in about 60-70% of the population. 

What is a loop?

100

Another term used for known fingerprint records. 

What are exemplars? 

100

This type of fingerprint is invisible to the naked eye and must be developed with powders and chemicals. 

What is latent print? 

100

This term refers to unique biological measurements or features used to identify. 

What are biometrics? 


200

These raised portions of the epidermis create friction and allow humans to grip objects. 

What are friction ridges?

200

This fingerprint contains ridges that make a complete circuit around a central core. 

What is a whorl? 

200

This type of fingerprint record is most commonly collected using ink on a tenprint card. 

What are inked prints?

200

This layer of skin forms the blueprint for friction ridges visible on the surface. 

What is the basal layer? 

200

This biometric is the most commonly used for criminal identification worldwide and was the first to be digitized. 

What are fingerprints? 

300

This forensic principle states, "Every contact leaves a trace."

What is Locard's Exchange Principle? 

300

This pattern is the least common and makes up about 5% of fingerprints. 

What is an arch? 

300

Known prints are collected for this purpose when compared to latent prints from the crime scene. 


What is comparison to unknown or latent prints? 

300

This type of fingerprint is three-dimensional and left in a soft or pliable material. 

What are plastic prints? 

300

AFIS serves this purpose when determining whether an individual has been arrested before. 

What is a tenprint record search? 

400

Fingerprint analysis examines a single print to determine suitability, type, and features. 

What is fingerprint analysis? 

400

This fingerprint pattern requires two deltas and a sufficient recurve.

What is a whorl? 

400

THis digital method records fingerprints using a glass or plastic plate and directly feeds into AFIS. 

What is Livescan fingerprinting? 

400

These fingerprints are visible because they are left in a colored or visible substance. 

What is a patent print? 

400

The AFIs process involves the computer identifying minutiae such as bifurcations, ridges, endings, and dots. 

What is feature extraction? 

500

No two fingerprints have ever been found to share the same types and arrangements of these features. 

What are minutiae? 

500

The two key features used to describe ridge flow in fingerprint patterns are these. 


What are the core and the delta? 

500

These challenges may complicate the collection of exemplars from deceased individuals. (4 answers) 

What are rigor mortis, putrefaction, maceration, or mummification? 

500

This substance coats friction ridges and is deposited onto a surface to form a latent print. 

What is the matrix? 

500

This AFIS database stores unidentified latent fingerprints so they can be searched against future tenprint records. 

What is the Unsolved Latent database? 

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